Streszczenie
The paper provides an overview of the ways in which recent tensions between ethnic groups in Oceania have been accommodated. It focuses on three cases from the Southwest Pacific: Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands, in order to make a comparative note about the circumstances of these contexts in which constitutional exercises have followed violent conflict.
Bibliografia
Andreas Holtz, Matthias Kowasch and Oliver Hasenkamp (eds), A Region in Transition: Politics and Power in the Pacific Islands Countries, Saarbrücken: Universaar, Saarbrücken, 2016.
Anthony J. Regan, ‘The Bougainville Peace Agreement, 20012002: Towards Order and Stability for Bougainville?’ in ‘Arc of Instability’? Melanesia in the Early 2000s, R.J. May (ed.), Canberra and Christchurch: State, Society and Governance in Melanesia Project, ANU, and Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Canterbury, 2002.
Constitution of Bougainville: http://www.paclii.org/pg/constitution-bougainville-2004.html(accessed 17.05.2017).
Graham Hassall, ‘Democracy in the Pacific: Tensions between System and Life-World’ in A Region in Transition: Politics and Power in the Pacific Islands Countries, Saarbrücken: Universaar, Saarbrücken, 2016, Andreas Holtz, Mathias Kowasch and Oliver Hasenkamp (eds), pp. 313–360.
Matthew G. Allen, ‘Land, Identity and Conflict on Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands’, Australian Geographer, Vol. 43, No. 2, 2012, pp. 163–180.
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Solomon Islands Provincial Government Review Committee, Report of the Provincial Government Review Committee, 1986–1987, Honiara, Solomon Islands: Ministry of Home Affairs & Provincial Government, 1987.