Journal article

Customary Authority and State Withdrawal in Solomon Islands: Resilience or Tenacity?

D McDougall

Journal of Pacific History | ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD | Published : 2015

Abstract

After a period of civil crisis (1998-2003), the Solomon Islands state was often characterised as weak and failing, but the society as strong and resilient. Such characterisations resonate with discussions of 'resilience' now prominent in international development discourse. Focusing on institutions of chiefly authority in Ranongga (in Solomon Islands' Western Province), this paper suggests that while such non-state forms of governance did help to maintain social order in a time of national crisis and economic collapse, they should not be understood as autonomous systems that have retained their identity against external disturbances. To the contrary, like other neo-traditional institutions o..

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University of Melbourne Researchers