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Islands, islanders, and the world

Part of the Cambridge Human Geography series
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This is a book about Fiji, a country whose recent political instability can be directly traced to its distinctive colonial and post-colonial experience.

For one particular region of Fiji the authors examine the environmental, social and economic aspects of this experience, at scales ranging from national and regional to island, village and household.

Recent discussions in Third World geography, regional economics and development planning have been full of rhetoric about 'underdevelopment', 'centre-periphery relations' and 'dependency', but seldom are the actual processes which give rise to these phenomena examined in detail.

In this book the authors explore in depth the inter-relations between the island landscape, the cultural geography of the islanders and the intrusive values and opportunities of the market economy.

Some important lessons are to be learnt from the gap between what might be predicted from abstract theories of development and what is actually happening in the real world of politicians, planners, farmers and fishermen.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521030080 / 9780521030083
Paperback / softback
996.11
02/11/2006
United Kingdom
English
research & professional Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1988.