SOLOMON-ISLAND NONGOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS - MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL ACTORS

Authors
Citation
J. Roughan, SOLOMON-ISLAND NONGOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS - MAJOR ENVIRONMENTAL ACTORS, The Contemporary Pacific, 9(1), 1997, pp. 157-166
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Area Studies
Journal title
ISSN journal
1043898X
Volume
9
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
157 - 166
Database
ISI
SICI code
1043-898X(1997)9:1<157:SNO-ME>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
The scattered nature of Solomon Island villages, the people's low lite racy rate, and the country's many languages make it difficult to share development and environment messages effectively. Solomon Islands Dev elopment Trust has had a fourteen-year track record of reaching out to the village sector through its fifty mobile teams as well as its medi a arm, theater team, and departments focusing on sustainable forestry practices. It has become a major actor in combating destructive loggin g practices. The Pavuvu controversy focused national attention on the destructive practices of an overseas logging company, the government's dire need to gain revenue through logging, and the public stance of n ongovernment organizations against the logging companies and the gover nment. The Pavuvu controversy clarified for many that the logging issu e was not simply about logging versus not logging, but more about the kind of government the country was experiencing.