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No Island is an “Island”: Some Perspectives on Development and Environmental Justice in Oceania

Malm, Thomas LU (2003) World System History and Global Environmental Change
Abstract
Since the 1990s, it has often been argued that the earth is like an island in space and that its brittleness is most clearly reflected on small islands in the oceans. Easter Island, for instance, with its largely depleted resources and an indigenous population which almost became extinct in the 19th century, has been seen as a microcosmic warning about what may happen to our entire planet. However, the analogy of the earth and islands with finite natural resources is not self-evident from perspectives on human migration, trade, or carrying capacity. Using the islands of Oceania as examples, it is argued in this paper that unlike our “earth island” in space, these islands are not any isolated, finite “planets”, but parts of a much larger, a... (More)
Since the 1990s, it has often been argued that the earth is like an island in space and that its brittleness is most clearly reflected on small islands in the oceans. Easter Island, for instance, with its largely depleted resources and an indigenous population which almost became extinct in the 19th century, has been seen as a microcosmic warning about what may happen to our entire planet. However, the analogy of the earth and islands with finite natural resources is not self-evident from perspectives on human migration, trade, or carrying capacity. Using the islands of Oceania as examples, it is argued in this paper that unlike our “earth island” in space, these islands are not any isolated, finite “planets”, but parts of a much larger, a global, system of migration and resource flow. Slave trade, introduced diseases, the depletion of certain exported natural resources, nuclear tests, pollution and the exchange of geo-strategic opportunities against aid money, to mention just a few factors, exemplify that the worst tragedy, as far as the human island populations are concerned, have occurred exactly because the islands no longer have remained isolated from a larger economic system. This paper also shows that the economies of the Pacific microstates increasingly are becoming dependant on global trans-national networks of kin and economic transactions that have very little to do with local natural resources, but rather with something which actually might be their most important economic resource of all: independence. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
keywords
Pacific Islands, Oceania, Human Ecology, Environmental Justice, Polynesia
conference name
World System History and Global Environmental Change
conference location
Sweden
conference dates
0001-01-02
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
71d48ac4-14bd-4154-86bd-7f575c4bc301 (old id 607336)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:37:16
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:15:11
@misc{71d48ac4-14bd-4154-86bd-7f575c4bc301,
  abstract     = {{Since the 1990s, it has often been argued that the earth is like an island in space and that its brittleness is most clearly reflected on small islands in the oceans. Easter Island, for instance, with its largely depleted resources and an indigenous population which almost became extinct in the 19th century, has been seen as a microcosmic warning about what may happen to our entire planet. However, the analogy of the earth and islands with finite natural resources is not self-evident from perspectives on human migration, trade, or carrying capacity. Using the islands of Oceania as examples, it is argued in this paper that unlike our “earth island” in space, these islands are not any isolated, finite “planets”, but parts of a much larger, a global, system of migration and resource flow. Slave trade, introduced diseases, the depletion of certain exported natural resources, nuclear tests, pollution and the exchange of geo-strategic opportunities against aid money, to mention just a few factors, exemplify that the worst tragedy, as far as the human island populations are concerned, have occurred exactly because the islands no longer have remained isolated from a larger economic system. This paper also shows that the economies of the Pacific microstates increasingly are becoming dependant on global trans-national networks of kin and economic transactions that have very little to do with local natural resources, but rather with something which actually might be their most important economic resource of all: independence.}},
  author       = {{Malm, Thomas}},
  keywords     = {{Pacific Islands; Oceania; Human Ecology; Environmental Justice; Polynesia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{No Island is an “Island”: Some Perspectives on Development and Environmental Justice in Oceania}},
  year         = {{2003}},
}