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, its essential argument remains 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 characterized other ethnically divided societies, such as Guyana? The ...
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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, its essential argument remains 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 characterized 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. Norton's study is a critical piece of scholarship on late-colonial Fiji.
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Seller's Description:
Good. Ex-lib, good. Cloth 8vo. The development of accomodation between Fijian natives and Indian immigrants during and after the colonial period. 2020pp. Index, biblio. Two maps, 32 b/w photos. > Language: English | > Media/Binding: Hardcover |