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About The Pacific Centre

The Australian National University offers excellent resources and facilities for research in the Pacific Islands region. Since the foundation of the University, the area has been a major focus of interest, and the University has achieved international renown through its research and publications.

The Pacific Islands, scattered across a quarter of the earth's surface, are diverse. Pacific Islanders speak a quarter of the world's languages, were formerly administered by a half dozen imperial powers, and run the gamut from formal colonial dependencies through 'associated state' conditions to states with full political independence. Environmental diversity matches cultural and demographic variety: yet Island governments cherish a sense of common destiny, expressed in technical cooperation and political collaboration through several regional organisations including the University of the South Pacific, the South Pacific Forum, the Pacific Community, and the Forum Fisheries Agency.

Australia has been involved in island affairs for most of the past two hundred years, and remains a major power in a region of strategic significance and considerable political volatility. The formation of the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies at ANU expressed the need for accurate research, policy discussion, and technical services for the region. ANU has the world's largest and most diverse concentration of scholars with research commitment and practical experience relating to the Pacific Islands region.

The Centre for the Contemporary Pacific provides a formal and focused structure to tap the unmatched strengths of the School and the University in Pacific scholarship and to enhance its regional outreach activities. It succeeds and builds on the work of the Pacific Islands Liaison Centre.

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The Centre's objectives include

  • Developing and promoting Pacific studies within the Australian National University;
  • Developing links with government agencies, institutions and universities within Australia and the Pacific region and acting as a focal point for their access to Pacific studies at ANU;
  • Facilitating contact and communication between Pacific scholars in Australia and the outside world through active cooperation with other centres and institutes for Pacific studies;
  • Undertaking an outreach role in the Pacific region on behalf of the ANU and more generally for Pacific studies within Australia.

The Centre pursues these goals by

  • Creating a network of information in a form which can be accessed by governments and universities throughout the region
  • Consolidating and expanding Pacific Island library and reference material in Australia.
  • Establishing visiting fellowships, for variable periods, for Pacific Island political or public service leaders to share their expertise with interested scholars and reflect on their experience.
  • Hosting major annual workshops on topical issues and concerns in the contemporary Pacific
  • Facilitating collaborative research projects with island universities in humanities and the social sciences.

In the context of the Centre's activities, 'the Pacific' refers to Papua New Guinea and the other islands states and territories of Melanesia, Polynesia and Micronesia, with particular emphasis on the Southwest Pacific region. The term 'contemporary' is broadly understood to include history and prehistory.

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