University of Hawaii .. Island Center for Asian and
E LE ER MOORE HALL 215 PHONE: 948-6393 VOL. XIII:4 JUNE/JULY 1982 1890 EAST-WEST ROAD UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI HONOLULU, HAWAII 682
948-6394 948-8439
CONTENTS
USP/UH ive Education Effort
Attention Graduate tudents
New PIP Students
i ture: Dr. Marshall Sahlins
PAAC Renate Pla
Pacific Islands es in logy
PIP Direc r in Micronesia
PTC '83
Waigani Seminar 1982: CALL FOR PAPERS
Women's St
New Publicat
Publications
New Pub
UN Visiting Hiss
Conference: CALL FOR PAPERS
From IASER
the Hawaii Geographic Society
From MARC
LATE NOTES
at UH
SPC Regional Conference
SPC Work
and Evaluation Committee Concludes its
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USP/UH COOPERAT
Since 1981, University educators in the South PRESCILA ESPIRITU early this year, conduct teachers. The course was sponsored and was held at the USP Extens course was conducted in 1981 in Science Research Institute) and underway for a linguistics course and follow-up courses on the for each of these regions.
ATTENTION
Graduate students in Pac f c lands academic advising before the b should be made for dates between August 23, 24, and 26. Class
NFW
EDUCATION EI•'FORT
sharing their expertise with tment of Linguistics) and
) spent six weeks on Tarawa, inguistics for 15 Kiribati school
University of the South Pacific (Suva) Teao reke, Tarawa. A similiar
STUDENTS
DONALD M. TOPPING (Social inguistics). Plans are Vanuatu in January, 1983,
are being proposed
j are asked to see Dr. Kiste for the fall 1982 semester. Appointments
0 and 20, 1982. Registration will be t 30.
Two new students will in their mas ret' in PAcific Islands Studies during the 1982 fall semester. They arP ~ir. MARK BERC of Cuam and Mr. B1KENIBEU PAENIU of Tuvalu. Both men arP East-W0st in Open Grants.
PACIFIC ISLANDS LECTURE: DR. MARSHALL SAHLINS
On June 17, 1982, Dr. MARSHALL SAHLINS a lecture entitled "Captain James Cook public and jointly sponsored the U and the Pacific Islands Studies Program.
Pacific Islands Anthropologist, gave ing Cod." The event was open to the
of Anthropology, Hawaiian Studies
PAAC LUNCHEON
" Dr. RENATE PLATZODER, At , was the guest speaker at a Kahala Hilton Luncheon on June 16 1982. Dr. Plat s a senior staff member of the Institute for International Affairs, Ebenhausen 1974 she has been a member of the de the third U.N. Conference on the Law o in the recent negotiations held in New
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Dr. Platzoder is the author of numerous of the executive board of the Law of the a lecturer for International Law at the
Munich, Federal Republic of Germany. Since of the Federal Republic of Germany to
Sea and as such she was a participant City.
lications on law of the sea; a member Sea Institute, University of Hawaii; and
versity of Munich.
Her topic at the luncheon was Law of the Sea Developments and Their Effects on the Pacific''. The affair was joint the Pacific and Asian Affairs Council, Law of the Sea Institute, and Law Association.
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PACIFIC ISLANDS COURSES IN ANTHROPOLOGY
The UH department of Anthropology is forltmate to have Dr. WARD GOODENOUGH, wellknown Cultural Anthropologist, as a visiting professor for the 1982-83 academic year. In the fall, Dr. C<1oclenough will tl'ach two courses: Anth 414, "Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology" and Anth 750 E, a graduatt· seminar in social anthro-pology concentrating on Melanesia. In the spring he \vil1 teach /\nth 330, "SociaL Organi%ation" and Anth 750 E, <1 graduate seminar in socin1 anthropology concentrating on Micronesia.
PIP DIRECTOR TO TEACH ANTHROPOLOC:Y IN MICRONESIA
The Department of Education of the Marshall Islands h:1s asked Pacific Islands Studies Director, Dr. ROBERT K1STE to teach a course on the Pt•oples of Micronesia this summer, in Majuro. The S-week course wi11 be attl•ndl'd by Marshall islands high school teachers.
PTC '81
The fifth annual Pacific Telecommunications Conference (PTC) will be lwld in Honolulu, January 16-19, 1983. PTC '8'3 will he the first intvrn<Jtional communication,s conference to be held during the United Nations' World Communications Year. Some of the planned topics which an• perhaps of particular intvn·st to the Pacific Islands are: User Requiremvnts, National Pol icil·s and 1nfr;lstructurcs, R(•gional and International Satellite Systems, llndc•rsea Fiber Optics, Tr;ldc Considerations, Weather/ Emergency Warning, etc.
Further items concerning the conference wil1 appenr hen· as they become available. ff you need more information now, contact:
PTC '8'3 I 1 l 0 U n i v v r s i l y ,\ v v nttv
Suite 30 3 Honolulu, Hawaii 96826 USA
GRADUATE STUDENT ORCANTZATION TRAVEL F'UND
The Graduate Student Organiz;ltion Travel Fund was established in 1975 to provide assistance fro graduate students making presentations and representations at conferences and professional meetings on the mainland and other parts of the world. The Graduate Student Organi~ation feels that it is important for students to have the opportunity to parti(·ipate in these meetings to pn•sL•nt their research results, exchange views with colleagt1es, and to investigate potential employment opportunities. For this reason, the Fund represc•nts a major commitment on the part of the org<mization.
The Travel Fund Committee reviews the applications and submits a list of recommended recipients to the GSO Council I Assembly for approval. The Committee is composed of CSO members on an Application Revi0w Board and an Appvals Board.
Application deadlines are as follows:
1. For travel during the Fall 1982 semester - September 24.
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2. For travel during the Spring 1983 semester - January 28.
3. For travel during the Summer 198'3 semester - April 22.
For application forms and further information, please contact the GSO Office, Hemenway Hall, Room 212. Phone 948-8776.
INSTITUTE FOR POLYNESIAN STUDIES BEST PAPER AWARDS
The Institute for Polynesian Studies, sponsored by the Polynesian Culture Center and Brigham Young University- Hawaii Campus, annouces two best paper awards to students in the Pacific as follows:
$100 to the best paper on a Pacific subject submitted by a undergrad11ate student
$100 to the best paper on a Pacific subject submitted by a graduate student
Rules for entry:
Only students currently registered for classes in Pacific Universities are eligible. Only unpublished papc•rs are accepted. All manuscripts must be forwarded to:
Dr. Jerty K. Loveland, Director Institute for Polynesian Studies
Brigham Young University -Hawaii Campus Laie, Hawaii 96762
on, or before 31 December 1982.
If suitable for publication, the privi l•·gc· may be offered the winners of having the articles published in a future edition of the Pacific Studies Journal.
All papers should be neatly typed, double-spaced, and should follow a recognized style of footnoting, bibliography, etc. Papers should not exceed 25 typewritten pages in length.
All manuscripts must include a letter of recommendation from either a faculty advisor or the Chairman of the Department in which the student is currently enrolled.
WATGANT SEMINAR 1982: CALL FOR PAPERS
The Waigani Seminar for 1982 will be held at the University of Papua New Guinea from Sunday September 5 to Saturday, September ll. The conference theme and title is:
The Point Aims and the National Goals: Performance Problems and Prospects Af_ter a __ j)ec~<!Ee·
The Waigani Seminar Steering Committee invites papers to be submitted within three separately organized sections.
Section I: Women and Development
(Co-ordinators - Wendy Lee, Dept. of Language Naomi Martin, Education Research Unit).
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Topics:
1. The Position of Women Reviewed
2. Women in Agriculture
3. Women and the Labor Market
4. Women and the Law
5. Agencies in Womc~n' s Development
6. \.Jomen and Social Change
Section II:
(Co-ordinator- Peter King, Dept. of Political Studies).
1. Independence as a Political Experience
2. Parliamentary Performance and the Electoral System
3. The Political Executive and the Public Service: Restructuring the Relationship
4. Public Enterprise and Public Aut bod ties: the State and Capitalism
5. Public Service Localisation and the Expatriate Role
6. The Constitution, the Law and Reform
7. Decentralisation: Problems and Prospects
8. Foreign Policy: the White Paper and Beyond
9. Resources Policy and the Threat of Political Decay
10. Towards a Land Policy
11. Political Parties and Political Development
12. South Pacific and other Comparisons
(Co-ordinator- Vincent Warakai, Dept. of Anthropology & Sociology).
A. lsf_eo logy_~-~~-a t _ion~!_Cc:al s
1. The Philosophy of Self-Reliance Revisited
2. Equality, Participation and the Melanesian Way in the 1980s
3. Quality of Leadership
B. Social Developme~
4. Health and Family
5. Education and Development
6. Other Issues in Social Development
C. The~ht_"!:_oin!_ Pl~n and t~~~co~2~111Y
7. Foreign vs Local Business
8. Trade and Self-Sufficiency
Deadlines:
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Papers should be typed on A4 paper and submitted to thl' appropriate Section Cll-ordinator for printing hy Monday August 2, 1982.
Papers to be submitted after tlwt date should be submitted in 100 copies to the Section Co-ordinator by Tllllrsday Septc·mber 2, 1982. A selection of papers from the Seminar wi11 !w publislwd by UPNC: at a later datv.
~?_x:-_ganj__;::;J_t_~~: Responsibi1 ity for ovvrall organL~ation of the Seminar has bN'n assumed by tlw Department of Extension Studies and the Department of Po]i.tica1 and Administrative• Studies, UPNC, to whom enquiries and suggestiuns :d1otJt tht• seminar should bt• i!ddn•ssed.
(Prof.) C:.P. KINC. ~
(Prof_·l J.T. CRIFFEN. Extension Stttdies Po I it i ca 1 Studies
CONVENOR. Waigani Sl·minar Steering Committee
Box 320
University P.O. Papua New Cuinea
W0~1EN' S STlJD I ES CONFERENCE: CALL FOR PAPERS
An international confl'rl'IH'e •·ntitled "Cont'L'pts and Strategies: Women's Studies in Different Cultural ContL·xts" will lw sponsored by the \.Jo;nen's Studies Program of the University of Hawaii in November, 1982.
According to Conference t:oordinator NANCY CARAWAY, tlw purpose of the conference is "to assess the impact of Woml·n's Studies and feminist scholarship in natural science, social science and tltl' human it ivs on the social, cult ural, and political aspects of the female experience in Hawaii, Asia and the Pacific."
Papers from women and mvn an· solicited. An abstrnct of 200-500 words is due by July l, 1982 to be considered for presentntion. Full pnpers are due by October 1, 1982. Ten of these will be selected to receive n $200 cash award payable on presentation of the paper in Hawaii.
Abstracts will be published in a special issue of the University of Hawaii Wo:nt•n's Studies Program Working Papers St>ries.
Plans are underway for a symposium volume based on selected p<!pers presented at the Conference.
SEND ABSTRACT AND TITLE TO: Dr. Madeleine Coodman, Director 1-Jorwn's Studies Program University of Hawaii 722 Porteus, 2424 Maile Way Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
FOR HORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Nancie Caraway, Conference Coordinator (808) 948-7464 or 948-6966
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NEW PUBLICATION FROM lASER
The Institute of Applied Social and Economic Research (lASER), Papua New Guinea, wishes to announce a new monograph entitled Traditional Conservation in Papua New Guinea. The monograph contains the full proceedings of the conference held in Port Moresby in October 1980, jointly organized by lASER and the Papua New Guinea Office of Enviroment and Conservation. The new monograph is a collection of information on all aspects of enviromental and natural resource management in Papua New Guinea (covering soil, vegetation, mineral, wildlife and forest, freshwater and marine resources) 1 con-tributed by overseas researchers and scientists, Papua New Guinean officers and village residents. The book contains 43 papers; 388 text pp., and 20 photographs, Copies can be obtained from:
Papua New Guinea Institute of Applied Social and Economic Research
P.O. Box 5354 Boroko
Papua New Guinea
The price is K4.50 plus 75 toea postage and handling. Overseas customers, please pay in PNG kina by bank draft. Books will be sent via surface mail,
PUBLICATIONS FROM THE HAWAII GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY
The following Pacific: maps and publications are available from the Hawaii Geographic Society:
#1 Map of the New Pacific - 1982 ed.
la 45 x 62 em I 18 x 25"
1b 8!z X 11"
lc Postal Cards
National Geographic Socie!1_~~~:
$3.50
$1.00
.20
#2 Map of Micronesia - 1981 ed.
2a = 45 x 62 em I 18 x 25"
2b 8!z X 11"
#3 KiritimatiiNew Pacific ed.
28 x 44 em I 11 x 17"
1' Islands of Hawaii, color, two-side print, folded, 38 x 24"- $7.50
i< Islands of the Pacific - 1974 ed., color, two-side print, 37 x 23" - $7.50
*Physical World, color, 30 x 43" - $9.50 *Political World, color, 30 x 43" - $9.50
>'<U.S.A. Political== 30" x 50" - $3.50 * World Political 30" X 50" - $3.50
i< Islands of Hawaii, 0' ahu Inset, color, 18 x 25" - $3.00
i< Marianas Typhoon Hap and Plotting Chart, 22 x 33" - $3.50
* Island of Hawaii, NASA Landsat, color - $3.50
$3.50
$1.00
$3.50
*HAWAIIAN ISLANDS: 1792 1794, Ceorge Vancouver's Original map of Hawaii--Telex bond paper, colored, 12 x 18" (30x45cm) - $8.00
* THE WORLD
;, FIJI ISLANDS:
* MAP OF TONCA,
* HONC:KONG
·k. SAi'>fOA
CATALOCS
Map order;
Publications
ISLAND HUS
A
$9.95 USPS
30
OF
SAMPLE COPY OF information inc
Back i
SOUTH PACIFIC
7'
42
24 X
em, 0
3 50
- $8.00
'~ MAP OF TONGA, 30 x 45 em, color - $3.00
VANUATU (NEW HEBRIDES), 25 x 20 em- $2.50
·k sl of Hawaii, Maui, Molokai/Lanai, Oahu, Kauai - $3.50 each
FI 1.00 ith order.
0 li g tube is $2.50 additional per available; Pri es subject to change at any time.
David Fanshawe
ic o he islands south of the equator. to ap ure the qua] i ty, feel, and
South Paci fi make this a unique and
th USPS ip codes; $11.95 outside
yours r $1 with other order. Full subs(·ription
50
1976 o present, are availabLe for $1.25 and postage--suhj('ct to availability.
HAWAII HOHE ENEI~GY , $9.50 ($13.50 a r)
SAILS FOR HIRE $ .0 ($7.00
STARS OVER HAhiA 1 I CUM1, ll
LIFE AND LEGENDS OF NICRONES A,
l04pp' 18 1 book is order.
d A Book
i r
'' s charts, $4.00 ( .00 air)
Hargret and Johnson
lassie, y t new, first-hand account, this b rocbure avai lab ie fre0• with other
ACCIE (;REY OF SAMOA, Nelson ustis
216 pp, i us. 7. ($ . 00
SO!JTH PACIFIC NATJONS DECAL ST CKER, full color, 6 x rfl J , 15 x 10 em,
$2.00 with any order.
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SPECIAL PRICES FOR MAPS PUBLISHED BY HAWAI'T GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY:
$3.50 for first copy, then $1.50/copy thereafter, you may mix/match titles. If order totals 25 maps the is $1/map + $2.50 postage /handling.
in funds are with first order, and for any order under US$25.00. P 0. or letters-of-order will be accepted from institutions.
Check or money order, drawn on a bank with a U.S. Office, will be accepted immediate Those drawn on other banks will be sent for collection be-fore order is fulfilled--usually 2-4 weeks.
Send US via registered mail: this is best method of order if under US$10.00. DO NOT USE POSTAL MONEY ORDER OR POSTAL TRANSFER OF FUNDS FOR orders. VISA/MASTERCARD charged to credit cards are accepted: (808) 538-3952. Cable: PACIFHERIT-Honolulu.
SEND YOUR ORDER/PAYMENT TO:
HAWAI'I GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY BOOKSTORE Post Office Box 1698 Honolulu, Hawai'i 96806 USA
NEW PUBLICAT fON FROH t1i\RC
DIRK BALLENDORF Director of the t1icronesian Area Research Center sent us the fol release:
The t1icronesian Area Research Center (t1ARC) announces the publication of a new t, The Mariana Islands, published originally in 1889 in French, now translated into English by University of Guam Professor Sylvia E. and edited t1ARC associate editor Robert D. Craig. The fifty-two page booklet is a report written by Antoine-Alfred Marche, a French explorer, ethnographer, and scientist after his two-year visit to the Mariana Islands (1887-1889).
After making the translation in 1981, Professor Cheng visited the I
~1usee de 1' Homme (Ethnographic t1useum) in Paris where she found to her delight thirty-one original photographs made by Harche during his visit. Twenty of these photographs are reproduced and published for the first time in this MARC translation. They represent the oldest known extant photographs taken of Cuam and the Mariana Islands.
One significant photograph is of Father Jose Torres Palomo taken about 1888 when he was fifty-one years of age, the earliest known photograph of him.
The pamphlet includes a short editor's preface and a translator's introduction, and it can be purchased from the Micronesian Area Research Center at a cost of US$3.25.
The address is: tvh\RC University of Guam UOC Station Mangilao, Guam 96913
ION AT
and Micronesian ,Students 2, 1982. The meeting
request of the Interstudents in attendance
opment Planners was held in Suva, Fiji, from s, strategi and marine resources. This
the South Pacific Commission (SPC), (SPEC) the United Nations German Foundation for Tnter
een countries from the SPC o zations.
oa S tibau, General Manager of emerging from he opening state
n:.;titutions- the Director rammes, Mr. W.T. Brown;
Dr F iedr idl of the German inc]ude:
nd economies would d f try;
rc would be vi tal for
hose needs required
among planners
to deve
o ndustry and Commerce, Fiji, Dr. F.V. Sevel , was one
rep tatives were the Tuna es, an SPC consultant.
regional instituions areas of
~C1~_c:__~~!_!c i e.>! , recommended that member countries,
onal project, co-ordination these organizations
intergovernmental co-operation
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The conclusions and recommendations of the conference will be submitted to the 1982 SPC Planning and Evaluation Committee Meeting held 23 - 25 June at SPC headquarters, Noumea, and to the 1982 pre-forum SPEC Committee Meeting to be held in August this year.
SPC PLANNING AND EVALUATION COMMITTEE CONCLUDES ITS WORK
The South Pacific Commission Planning and Evaluation Committee, which met at the South Pacific Commission Headquarters over a period of three days, carne to end on Friday 25 June 1982. This Committee was chaired by the newly-elected Vice-President of the Government Council of New Caledonia, M. Jean-Marie Tjibaou. The representative of the Federated States of Micronesia, Mr. Pedro Harris, was Vice-Chairman of the Committee meeting.
ln a statement at the official opening, the Secretary-General, Honourable M. Young Vivian, welcomed the Secretary-Ceneral Designate, Mr. Francis Bugotu, who will take up his new functions as Secretary-Ceneral of the SPC on l July.
One of the major items for discussion each year is the evaluation of SPC activities in the preceding year. The island governments and administrations expressed their satisfaction at SPC activities in 1981. This year the Committee paid special attention to the Mobile Trai Unit for Youth and Community Workers, currently based in
uro, Marshall Islands. In 1983, the Planning and Evaluation Committee will devote its attention to the Community Education Training Centre in Fiji.
The Secre ral, Honourable M. Young Vivian, presented the three-year Intergrated Work Programme and t for 1983, 1984, and 1985. 1~e Committee was informed that participating governments had increased their contri.bution to the 1983 budget by 6.69%. The Committee agreed to recommend to the Twenty-Second South Pacific Conference a Work Programme and Budget for 1983 totalling 407,313,600 CFP Francs.
The Committee chose two themes for discussion by the Twenty-Second South South Pacific Conference. They are a social theme ''Increasing Urbanization: An Inevitable Development?" and an economic theme "Rural Development: The Basis for ProgrL·ss in the Pacific".
PACIFIC ISLANDS STUDIES PROGRAM MOORE HALl, 21 5 UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII 1890 East-West Road Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
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