Vakatorocaketaki ni taukei: the politics of affirmative action in post colonial Fiji
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Ratuva, Steven
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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
Asia Pacific Press
Asia Pacific Press
Abstract
This article examines the relationship between affirmative
action and regime change in Fiji—in particular, how affirmative
action has been used as a tool of social engineering. It argues
that affirmative action is more than an ordinary policy
prescription; rather, it has fundamental social engineering
and restructuring intent, based on political and ideological
considerations. Changes in the affirmative action programs
have been associated with changes in the interests of the
ruling élites, and, since independence, there have been shifts
in emphasis and strategies resulting from the interests of the
élites. Many affirmative action programs have led to failure and
loss of state resources. Since the military coup in 2006, most of
the affirmative action programs associated with past regimes
have been removed, including through the dramatic control and
then weakening of the indigenous Fijian middle class, which
benefited from past affirmative action policies. Paradoxically,
under the rubric of ‘rural development’, the interim government
has reinvented affirmative action, but it is now targeted at poor
rural villagers and shuns the middle class.
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Pacific Economic Bulletin, Vol. 25, No. 3, 2010
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