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Islands, enclaves and violence: sociospatial perspectives on resource conflict in Island Melanesia
Matthew Allen
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The Journal of Pacific History, 2013
The term ‘Melanesia’ is a partly geographic, partly cultural referent to a subregion of the island Pacific that has become very much part of ordinary descriptive language along with terms categorising other parts of the Pacific island world, namely Polynesia and Micronesia. Yet ‘Melanesia’ is much more than a descriptor.
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The term ‘Melanesia’ is a partly geographic, partly cultural referent to a subregion of the island Pacific that has become very much part of ordinary descriptive language along with terms categorising other parts of the Pacific island world, namely Polynesia and Micronesia. Yet ‘Melanesia’ is much more than a descriptor.
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Nature, 1961
THALASSAEMIA has previously been regarded as non-existent in Melanesians1. In August 1960, a Papuan female from the Milne Bay area of New Guinea, aged 18–20 yr., was admitted to the General Hospital, Port Moresby, for re-investigation of a refractory anaemia first noticed during pregnancy in 1957. On that occasion she had been delivered of a full-term,
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THALASSAEMIA has previously been regarded as non-existent in Melanesians1. In August 1960, a Papuan female from the Milne Bay area of New Guinea, aged 18–20 yr., was admitted to the General Hospital, Port Moresby, for re-investigation of a refractory anaemia first noticed during pregnancy in 1957. On that occasion she had been delivered of a full-term,
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