Indigenous Commercial Ambitions and Decentralisation in Papua New Guinea: The Missing Driver of Reform
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MacWilliam, Scott
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Canberra, ACT: State, Society and Governance in Melanesia (SSGM), Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University
Abstract
This Discussion Paper argues that the initial mid-
1970s establishment of provincial governments
as forms of decentralised authority has been misunderstood.
Anthony Regan, to cite one instance,
has argued that there was intended to be ‘a radical
redistribution of power, requiring the creation of
new centres of power able to act as a counterbalance
to the central government as well as operate
as new arenas for resolution of local tensions and
disputes’ (1992:9). Instead, here it is argued that the
principal determinant of the constitutional reforms
was the continuing drive by indigenes to open up
space in the postcolonial state so that their hold on
political power could be transformed into commercial
opportunities.
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