2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8373.2009.01404.x
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New Polynesian Triangle: Rethinking Polynesian migration and development in the Pacific

Abstract: For many Polynesians migration is still framed within a particular spatial context, although on an enlarged scale – one that we have termed the New Polynesian Triangle. With its apexes in the North American continent to the east, Australia in the west and New Zealand in the south, this New Polynesian Triangle encompasses a particular field through which ongoing Polynesian migration and movement continues to occur. Movement within this New Polynesian Triangle is both multidimensional and multidirectional. While… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Some proponents of diaspora theory suggest that when migrants leave their homelands, they become uprooted from their culture and disconnected from their people. However, in the case of Pasifika, they often return home while continually expanding their family networks and connections (Barcham et al , 2009; Lilomaiava‐Doktor, 2009). Figure 1 shows the pattern of movements that informants of the study have taken as Pasifika Trans‐Tasman migrants.…”
Section: Pacific Islanders—pasifika Trans‐tasman Migrantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some proponents of diaspora theory suggest that when migrants leave their homelands, they become uprooted from their culture and disconnected from their people. However, in the case of Pasifika, they often return home while continually expanding their family networks and connections (Barcham et al , 2009; Lilomaiava‐Doktor, 2009). Figure 1 shows the pattern of movements that informants of the study have taken as Pasifika Trans‐Tasman migrants.…”
Section: Pacific Islanders—pasifika Trans‐tasman Migrantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The questions that surround these connections, then, are especially relevant in the Pacific Islands region (see, e.g., Coxon & Cassity ; Gibson & McKenzie ). Because of both local initiative and close engagement with former colonial metropoles, some countries in the Pacific experience both high rates of educational attainment and face a range of opportunities for migration and engagement in the wider world (Barcham et al ). Often these are the smaller island microstates of the region with few physical resources for endogenous development.…”
Section: Geographies Of Migration Education and Development In The Pmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This uniquely diverse subgroup of Pacific Islanders has ancestral origins in the Polynesian triangle of islands (Barcham, Scheyvens, & Overton, 2009). This uniquely diverse subgroup of Pacific Islanders has ancestral origins in the Polynesian triangle of islands (Barcham, Scheyvens, & Overton, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%