Race and Politics in Fiji

Nonfiction, History, Australia & Oceania, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science
Cover of the book Race and Politics in Fiji by Robert Norton, University of Queensland Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Robert Norton ISBN: 9781921902161
Publisher: University of Queensland Press Publication: May 2, 2014
Imprint: University of Queensland Press Language: English
Author: Robert Norton
ISBN: 9781921902161
Publisher: University of Queensland Press
Publication: May 2, 2014
Imprint: University of Queensland Press
Language: English

Robert Norton’s Race and Politics in Fiji, first published in 1977, drew upon the author’s fieldwork in Fiji to develop the first serious and sustained study of politics in Fiji. An exercise in political anthropology, it was republished by UQP in 1990, but the essential argument remained much the same: the author sought to understand how political accommodation was achieved in Fiji despite deep ethnic and social cleavages. Why was Fiji able to escape the ethnic violence and turbulence that characterised other ethnically divided societies, such as Guyana? The answer lay in avoiding open competition for power at the ballot box. Instead, the principal political actors accepted the realities of the existing social and ethnic cleavages and sought to work with them. As Norton observes, ‘The recognition of racial division as a necessary framework for cooperation has become the major principle of social and political integration in Fiji’. Norton’s study of politics in Fiji is a critical piece of scholarship on late colonial Fiji.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Robert Norton’s Race and Politics in Fiji, first published in 1977, drew upon the author’s fieldwork in Fiji to develop the first serious and sustained study of politics in Fiji. An exercise in political anthropology, it was republished by UQP in 1990, but the essential argument remained much the same: the author sought to understand how political accommodation was achieved in Fiji despite deep ethnic and social cleavages. Why was Fiji able to escape the ethnic violence and turbulence that characterised other ethnically divided societies, such as Guyana? The answer lay in avoiding open competition for power at the ballot box. Instead, the principal political actors accepted the realities of the existing social and ethnic cleavages and sought to work with them. As Norton observes, ‘The recognition of racial division as a necessary framework for cooperation has become the major principle of social and political integration in Fiji’. Norton’s study of politics in Fiji is a critical piece of scholarship on late colonial Fiji.

More books from University of Queensland Press

Cover of the book Dreams of the Chosen by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Daywards by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Dancing Home by Robert Norton
Cover of the book The Chiefs' Country by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Purple Threads by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Traumata by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Finding a Way by Robert Norton
Cover of the book They Came for Sandalwood by Robert Norton
Cover of the book All My Januaries by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Peripheral Vision by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Alex Jackson by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Australians in Papua New Guinea 1960–1975 by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Swallow the Air by Robert Norton
Cover of the book Portable Curiosities by Robert Norton
Cover of the book The Special by Robert Norton
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy