Journal article

The geopolitical ecology of New Caledonia: territorial re-ordering, mining, and Indigenous economic development

Simon PJ Batterbury, Matthias Kowasch, Severine Bouard

JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECOLOGY | UNIV ARIZONA LIBRARIES | Published : 2020

Open access

Abstract

In the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia, conflict and difference between Indigenous Kanak people and European settlers has existed at least since the 1850s. We interrogate the geopolitical ecology of these islands, which is deeply wedded to natural resource extraction, is instrumentalized in political debate, power struggles, conflict, and the mining sector. Territoriality, including changes to political borders and access to land, has promoted the interests of the key actors in shaping the future of the islands. Violence in the 1980s was followed by the Matignon Accords (1988) and three provinces were established (North, South, Loyalty Islands). The South Province is governed by a ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

Thanks to Prof. Joy Porter for comments on a draft, Prof. Casey Walsh for comments and accepting the article, and the two referees for extensive reviews. Research was funded by the CNRT, IAC and the French Embassy in Australia over several years. We are also deeply thankful to the Kanak communities and other interviewees who welcomed us and who helped us with information and support.