Although the power of social media to bring people together across borders is acknowledged, very little has been written about the potential of social media sites for emerging Pacific scholars living transnationally across our region and beyond. We deploy thematic talanoa to demonstrate how emerging Pacific scholars engage Twitter as a platform where routes and relationships are established and teu/tauhi in the digital vā. Furthermore, we argue that emerging scholars of Pacific heritage are building an augmented reality founded on Pacific-specific ways of relationship building, forming external to, and in response to, marginalising dominant narratives inside and outside Pacific worlds
Understanding, articulating and managing relationality, the state of being related, is a central fea...
The survival of Pacific societies is partly attributed to the ability of Pacific ancestors to transm...
In early 2016, the two editors of this issue met together to discuss our common research interests. ...
This article investigates the performance of Pacific identities on Twitter during a high-profile c...
This article explores how journalists navigate the tensions between community engagement and profess...
International audienceThe goal of this article is to develop a regionally, ethnographically and netn...
He uri t?nei mai i ng? tai e papaki tu ana ki mauao, no te ia moana o te awanui, te ia-auraki o Taur...
This paper engages in a series of questions arising from the potentials and pitfalls of using digita...
The shared life philosophy of the Vā has been presented in scholarly writing as social, spiritual re...
As in other parts of the world, multimedia technology and the Internet have changed the ways that p...
This edited volume examines the opportunities to think, do, and/or create jointly afforded by digita...
The Pacific Islands region contains very diverse geographic, socio-cultural, political and communica...
This paper gives insights into the collective ways that Samoans and Tongans living in Brisbane have ...
This research analyses the manifestation of fāgogo – an indigenous form of Samoan storytelling – in ...
Colonialism remains active in Indigenous communities across the world, dominated by western value sy...
Understanding, articulating and managing relationality, the state of being related, is a central fea...
The survival of Pacific societies is partly attributed to the ability of Pacific ancestors to transm...
In early 2016, the two editors of this issue met together to discuss our common research interests. ...
This article investigates the performance of Pacific identities on Twitter during a high-profile c...
This article explores how journalists navigate the tensions between community engagement and profess...
International audienceThe goal of this article is to develop a regionally, ethnographically and netn...
He uri t?nei mai i ng? tai e papaki tu ana ki mauao, no te ia moana o te awanui, te ia-auraki o Taur...
This paper engages in a series of questions arising from the potentials and pitfalls of using digita...
The shared life philosophy of the Vā has been presented in scholarly writing as social, spiritual re...
As in other parts of the world, multimedia technology and the Internet have changed the ways that p...
This edited volume examines the opportunities to think, do, and/or create jointly afforded by digita...
The Pacific Islands region contains very diverse geographic, socio-cultural, political and communica...
This paper gives insights into the collective ways that Samoans and Tongans living in Brisbane have ...
This research analyses the manifestation of fāgogo – an indigenous form of Samoan storytelling – in ...
Colonialism remains active in Indigenous communities across the world, dominated by western value sy...
Understanding, articulating and managing relationality, the state of being related, is a central fea...
The survival of Pacific societies is partly attributed to the ability of Pacific ancestors to transm...
In early 2016, the two editors of this issue met together to discuss our common research interests. ...