OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/20636
2025-12-28T06:41:50ZThe rise and fall of sub-national island jurisdictions : the cases of the Galapagos Islands and San Andres y providencia
/library/oar/handle/123456789/21076
Title: The rise and fall of sub-national island jurisdictions : the cases of the Galapagos Islands and San Andres y providencia
Authors: Kerr, Sandy
Abstract: Starting with Iceland in 1944, the emergence of many small sovereign island states has
generated interest in the economic and political viability and vulnerability of small
jurisdictions. This seemingly irresistible march to sovereignty proceeded for several
decades after the Second World War, before waning considerably in recent years.
Instead, many island jurisdictions today choose to operate as relatively autonomous
units within a larger 'federal' framework encompassing larger states. Hence, recent
island scholarship has taken a natural turn towards sub-national or non-sovereign
jurisdictional powers and arrangements. The case studies selected for this comparative study of sub-national island
jurisdictions (SNlJs), the Galapagos Islands and San Andres and Old Providence (SAOP), are in many respects typical of islands around the world. Their respective
economies, for example, are dominated by the primary and tertiary sector activities of
fishing and tourism.2009-01-01T00:00:00ZIndex
/library/oar/handle/123456789/21073
Title: Index
Abstract: Index. In G. Baldacchino, & D. Milne (Eds.), The case for non-sovereignty : lessons from sub-national island jurisdictions.
Description: Names of contributors are in upper case lettering
References to their chapters are in bold2009-01-01T00:00:00ZThe case for non-sovereignty
/library/oar/handle/123456789/21072
Title: The case for non-sovereignty
Abstract: Territories like American Samoa, Anguilla, Aruba, Bermuda, the British Virgin
Islands, the Cayman Islands, the Cook Islands and the Faeroes are sub-national
island jurisdictions (SNIJs). They all share some measure of
autonomous government, and are easily construed as independent states-in-waiting.
Yet most of these territories exhibit no urgency to become
independent. Instead, they appear to have decided that there are political
and economic benefits accruing today when island territories are autonomous
but not sovereign.
Description: Most of the papers in this volume were previously published as a special issue
of The Round Table: Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.
95, Issue No. 386, September 2006. This volume is dedicated to Peter H. Lyon OBE, in grateful acknowledgement of his
generous support and service to the Island Studies programme, its faculty and
students at the University of Prince Edward Island, Canada, over many years. Peter's
contribution to the development of the Institute of Island Studies and to the
interdisciplinary graduate programme in Island Studies at UPEI has been
exceptional, as has been his unfailing support and enthusiasm for our research
and publications in Commonwealth outlets, including The Round Table.2009-01-01T00:00:00Z‘We are not ready’ : colonialism or autonomy in Tokelau
/library/oar/handle/123456789/21071
Title: ‘We are not ready’ : colonialism or autonomy in Tokelau
Authors: Connell, John
Abstract: Predictions of global decolonisation have waxed and waned. In the 1960s, during the
first great wave of decolonisation, it was widely assumed that there would be distinct
limits to this process and that numerous places were too small ever to become
independent. At that time, only Western Samoa (now Samoa), Tokelau's nearest
neighbour, was independent in the Pacific, and it was not until the 1970s that other
Pacific island states followed. Even smaller states, such as Tuvalu with barely 10,000
people, did become independent despite warnings about their viability. In some there
was local concern about uneven development, limited resources and infrastructure (as
for example in the Solomon Islands), and many small states went to independence
with trepidation as much as jubilation (Aldrich and Connell, 1998: 246). Nonetheless,
the mood had shifted to the extent that it was loosely assumed that even the
smallest colonial possessions would eventually become independent, or, at the very
least, would take on a much greater degree of self-government.2009-01-01T00:00:00Z