Type | Conference Paper - the xxx Convention of the International Political Science Association, Santiago, Chile 12th-16th July 2009 |
Title | Indigenous Nationalism in Fiji: Rethinking the Politics of Ethnicity |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
URL | http://paperroom.ipsa.org/papers/paper_1194.pdf |
Abstract | The Republic of the Fiji Islands has been plagued by coups d’etat since 1987 following elections at that time which had seen the first change of government since independence seventeen years earlier. These elections had resulted in the defeat of an indigenous chiefly elite by a broader coalition dominated numerically by Indo-Fijians. A military coup less than six weeks later was justified almost exclusively in terms of the alleged threat to indigenous rights posed by the new government. Further coups have followed, with the rhetoric of justification again centering on indigenous rights vis-à-vis perceived encroachment by Indo-Fijians. Images of politics in Fiji have therefore been dominated largely by ethnically based struggles for dominance with indigenous Fijians generally winning out by virtue of their control of the military. The most recent coup in December 2006, however, has revealed some significant contradictions and confounded explanations of Fiji’s politics based on a simple dichotomy of interests between indigenous Fijians and Indo-Fijians. In this instance, the commander of the Republic of Fiji Military Forces led a coup against a government dominated by Fijian nationalists claiming, among other things, that their government was based on racist principles and that Fiji needed a new way forward. The paper provides an analysis of this most recent episode in Fiji’s politics, focusing in particular on rival factions among indigenous Fijians, and assessing prospects for the future of constitutional rule. More generally, it considers the principles of indigenous political privilege vis-à-vis the rights of immigrant communities and how these have played out in practice. |
» | Fiji - Population Census 1996 |