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Full Description
This book provides a rigorous and cross-disciplinary analysis of this Melanesian nation at a critical juncture in its post-colonial and post-conflict history, with contributions from leading scholars of Solomon Islands. The notion of 'transition' as used to describe the recent drawdown of the decade-long Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) provides a departure point for considering other transformations - social, political and economic -under way in the archipelagic nation. Organised around a central tension between change and continuity, two of the book's key themes are the contested narratives of changing state-society relations and the changing social relations around land and natural resources engendered by ongoing processes of globalisation and urbanisation. Drawing heuristically on RAMSI's genesis in the 'state- building moment' that dominated international relations during the first decade of this century, the book also examines the critical distinction between 'state-building' and 'state formation' in the Solomon Islands context. It engages with global scholarly and policy debates on issues such as peacebuilding, state-building, legal pluralism, hybrid governance, globalisation, urbanisation and the governance of natural resources. These themes resonate well beyond Solomon Islands and Melanesia, and the book will be of interest to a wide range of students, scholars and development practitioners. This book was previously published as a special issue of The Journal of Pacific History.
Contents
1. Solomon Islands in Transition? 2. The Teleology and Romance of State-building in Solomon Islands 3. Honiara: Arrival City and Pacific Hybrid Living Space 4. From Taovia to Trustee: Urbanisation, Land Disputes and Social Differentiation in Kakabona 5. Customary Authority and State Withdrawal in Solomon Islands: Resilience or Tenacity? 6. Big Money in the Rural: Wealth and Dispossession in Western Solomons Political Economy 7. Maasina Rule beyond Recognition 8. Urban Land in Honiara: Strategies and Rights to the City