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- Digital Price: $18.00 USD (All sales final)
- The Contemporary Pacific
- University of Hawai'i Press
- Article
- Grass Roots and Deep Holes: Community Responses to Mining in Melanesia Volume 18, Number 2, Fall 2006, pp. 215-231
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $29.00 USD.
This issue contains 31 articles in total
- Contributors
- About the Artist: Larry Santana
- Adorning the World: Art of the Marquesas Islands (review)
- American Memorial Park Visitor Center and WWII Exhibit Hall, National Park Service (review)
- Pacific Jewelry and Adornment (review)
- Theatre and Political Process: Staging Identities in Tokelau and New Zealand (review)
- Sing-song (review)
- Voice Carried My Family (review)
- Tu: A Novel (review)
- Postcolonial Pacific Writing: Representations of the Body (review)
- The Aborigines of Taiwan: The Puyuma; From Headhunting to the Modern World (review)
- Historiographie de la Nouvelle-Caledonie (review)
- Life in the Republic of the Marshall Islands / Mour ilo Republic eo an Majol (review)
- Colonial Dis-Ease: US Navy Health Policies and the Chamorros of Guam, 1898-1941 (review)
- Mining and Indigenous Lifeworlds in Australia and Papua New Guinea (review)
- Sovereignty under Siege? Globalization and New Zealand (review)
- The Unseen City: Anthropological Perspectives on Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea (review)
- The Manipulation of Custom: From Uprising to Intervention in the Solomon Islands, and: Happy Isles in Crisis: The Historical Causes for a Failing State in Solomon Islands, 1988-2004 (review)
- Vanuatu
- Solomon Islands
- Papua New Guinea
- New Caledonia
- Fiji
- The Ecology and Economy of Indigenous Resistance: Divergent Perspectives on Mining in New Caledonia
- Cannibalistic Imaginaries: Mining the Natural and Social Body in Papua New Guinea
- Local Laborers in Papua New Guinea Mining: Attracted or Compelled to Work?
- Environmental Conservation and Mining: Strange Bedfellows in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea
- Who Is the "Original Affluent Society"? Ipili "Predatory Expansion" and the Porgera Gold Mine, Papua New Guinea
- Hinterland History: The Ok Tedi Mine and Its Cultural Consequences in Telefolmin
- Grass Roots and Deep Holes: Community Responses to Mining in Melanesia
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