Les iles Fiji: coûtumes et démocratie
In: Défense nationale: problèmes politiques, économiques, scientifiques, militaires, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 123-133
ISSN: 0035-1075, 0336-1489
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In: Défense nationale: problèmes politiques, économiques, scientifiques, militaires, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 123-133
ISSN: 0035-1075, 0336-1489
World Affairs Online
In: Archives de sociologie des religions, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 3-30
In: Outre-terre: revue française de géopolitique, Band 58-59, Heft 1, S. 273-300
ISSN: 1951-624X
In: Études rurales: anthropologie, économie, géographie, histoire, sociologie ; ER, Heft 165-166, S. 103-121
ISSN: 0014-2182
In: La revue maritime: informations, actualités, documentation maritime, S. 11-19
ISSN: 0335-3796, 1146-2132
In: Le monde diplomatique, Band 37, S. 26-27
ISSN: 0026-9395, 1147-2766
In: Critique internationale: revue comparative de sciences sociales, Heft 4, S. 71-92
ISSN: 1149-9818, 1290-7839
The post-September 11,2001 years have been characterized in Melanesia by the direct re-engagement of the former colonial powers (Australia & New Zealand) & by the obligation imposed on the young Oceanic states to implement neoliberal political & economic "reforms." An "arc of instability" supposedly stretches from Timor to Fiji, with a string of "failed states" of which the dereliction can only be treated by military intervention & the establishment of structural adjustment plans considered as a cure-all. This article sheds light on this turning point in international relations & undertakes to analyze its local repercussions with respect to traditions, in a context in which Melanesian societies & cultures are now regarded with an openly critical eye by the former colonial powers. The decline of ethnocultural nationalisms in the region, enshrined as state ideologies in the aftermath of independence, has a number of parallels with the current situation of biculturalism, a state institution in New Zealand since the 1980s, which is also now in crisis. Adapted from the source document.