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The Decolonisation of the Pacific Islands
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2010
Extract
At the end of the Second World War, the islands of Polynesia, Melanesia and Micronesia were all under foreign control. The Netherlands retained West New Guinea even while control of the rest of the Dutch East Indies slipped away, while on the other side of the South Pacific, Chile held Easter Island. Pitcairn, the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, Fiji and the Solomon Islands comprised Britain's Oceanic empire, in addition to informal overlordship of Tonga. France claimed New Caledonia, the French Establishments in Oceania (soon renamed French Polynesia) and Wallis and Futuna. The New Hebrides remained an Anglo-French condominium; Britain, Australia and New Zealand jointly administered Nauru. The United States' territories included older possessions – the Hawaiian islands, American Samoa and Guam – and the former Japanese colonies of the Northern Marianas, Mar-shall Islands and Caroline Islands administered as a United Nations trust territory. Australia controlled Papua and New Guinea (PNG), as well as islands in the Torres Strait and Norfolk Island; New Zealand had Western Samoa, the Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau. No island group in Oceania, other than New Zealand, was independent.
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Notes
1 Recent British writers give short shrift to independence of Oceania, which is not mentioned in Cain, P.J. and Hopkins, A.G., British Imperialism: Crisis and Deconstruction, 1914–1990 (London 1993),Google Scholar or Lapping, B., End of Empire (London 1989).Google ScholarJudd, D., Empire (London 1996),Google Scholar mentions in passing only Fiji and Tonga (p. 385), while James, L., The Rise and Fall of the British Empire (London 1994),Google Scholar discusses them not at all. Porter, B., The Lion's Share (London 1984),Google Scholar after covering decolonisation elsewhere, adds, ‘And so it went on into the “seventies” […]’ naming Fiji (but no other South Pacific possessions) among small colonies. Studies of France are seldom more detailed; Betts, R.F., France and Decolonisation, 1900–1962 (Macmillan 1991),CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Bouvier, J., Girault, R. and Thobie, J., Imperialisme a la francaise (Paris 1986),Google Scholar end the story with Algeria. Recent histories give cursory attention to the post-war decades, appending a few pages on the remaining territories and events in New Caledonia; see, e.g., Thobie, J. et al., Histoire de la France coloniale, 1914–1990 (Paris 1990),Google Scholar and Binoche-Guedra, J., La France d'outre-mer, 1815–1962 (Paris 1992)Google Scholar.
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