Latest Entries
Can “high integrity” carbon projects save the Pacific’s vanishing forests? And benefit landowners?
Climate change / Forests / Human Rights / Pacific

Can “high integrity” carbon projects save the Pacific’s vanishing forests? And benefit landowners?

Having witnessed the damaging antics of carbon cowboys and, more recently, self-interested greenwashing industry in REDD+ forest projects in PNG, I was sceptical and intrigued about the notion of “high integrity” carbon. So, I went to the Solomon Islands to see what it looked like on the ground. This issue is one of the most … Continue reading

Melbourne Press Club Quills finalist ‘Best Feature’
Climate change / Journalism / Pacific / Papua New Guinea

Melbourne Press Club Quills finalist ‘Best Feature’

Very chuffed to be a finalist in the 2023 Melbourne Press Club Quills Best Feature for my story “Climate justice in the Pacific” for The Monthly magazine. Congratulations to fellow finalists (below) in this and all categories. And good luck also to our Unimelb Master of Journalism alum and superstar talent Sasha Gattermayr who is … Continue reading

Terms of development: Reflections on the Australasian AID Conference
Aid & Development / Human Rights / Pacific / Policy

Terms of development: Reflections on the Australasian AID Conference

At the end of particularly gruelling teaching semester, I shot up to Canberra for the Australasian Aid and International Development conference hosted by the Development Policy Centre at ANU. Very grateful for this opportunity to reconnect with some Pacific and development experts and longtime ‘contacts’, and to think about issues in the region. This story for … Continue reading

Ransom Enterprise
Forests / Human Rights / Mining / Papua New Guinea / Politics / Uncategorized

Ransom Enterprise

Last month, a Queensland archeology professor and his three PNG colleagues, all women, were kidnapped from their field site in remote Western Province and held for ransom. PNG Prime Minister James Marape described the hostage-taking as unprecedented, a “random, opportunistic crime”, but there’s rather more to it. The backstory is interwoven with political, economic and … Continue reading