Skip to content
Pacific Dynamics

Pacific Dynamics

Pacific Dynamics is an online open access journal published by the Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, University of Canterbury, New Zealand

Menu
  • Home
  • About US
    • About Pacific Dynamics
    • Editorial Board
  • Issues
    • Volume 8 Issue 2 December 2024
    • Volume 8, Issue 1 March 2024
    • Volume 7 Issue 1 March 2023
    • Volume 6 Issue 2 September 2022
    • Volume 6 Issue 1 March 2022
    • Volume 5 Issue 1 March 2021
    • Volume 4 Issue 1 March 2020
    • Volume 3 Issue 1 August 2019
    • Volume 2 Number 2 November 2018
    • Volume 1 Number 2 November 2017
    • Volume 1 Number 1 July 2017
  • Special Issue
    • Volume 9 (1), Special Issue August 2025
    • Volume 8, Special Issue December 2024
    • Volume 2, Special Issue June 2018
  • POCCA Report
    • Volume 1
      • Executive Summary
      • Chapter 1: Introducing the Pacific Ocean Climate Change Assessment (POCCA) Project
      • Chapter 2: Framing Climate Science in the Pacific Islands
      • Chapter 3: Climate Change and Ocean Governance in the Pacific: Challenges of Sovereignty and Political Agency
      • Chapter 4: Regional Climate and Ocean Strategies, Policies and Frameworks – A Stocktake of Current Status
      • Chapter 5 : We are the Moana’ : Climate Risks, Narratives of Vulnerability and Indigenous Pacific Resilience
      • Chapter 6: Pacific Agency and Perceptions of Climate Crisis: Empowering the People’s Narratives
      • Chapter 7: Solwara, Moana, Ocean and Local Communities – The Social, Cultural and Economic Connections
      • Chapter 8: Safeguarding Biodiversity through Indigenous and Local Knowledge for Climate Change Resilience
      • Chapter 9: Thirst for Life: Water Security and Changing Climate in the Pacific
      • Chapter 10: Safe Livelihoods & Social Protection in the Climate Crisis
      • Chapter 11: COVID-19, Community Health, and Mitigating Climate Crisis
      • Chapter 12: Climate Crisis and Food Security in Pacific Island Countries and Territories
      • Chapter 13: Climate Crisis, Geopolitical Vulnerability, Transnational Crime and Mitigating Responses
      • Chapter 14: Loss and Damage: Save the Pacific, Save the World
      • Chapter 15: Climate Change and Impacts on Socio-Economic and Infrastructural Development
      • Chapter 16: Climate Crisis and Cultural Heritage: Conversations
      • Chapter 17: To Move or Not to Move: Climate Mobilities in the Pacific
      • Chapter 18: Climate Finance and Carbon Market: Implications on Local Communities in the Pacific
      • Chapter 19: Concluding Remarks
  • Pacific Regional Security Hub Working Papers
  • Thought Pieces
  • Call for Papers
    • Instructions for Contributors
  • Pacific shop
    • Remembering Epeli Hau’ofa His Life and Legacy
Menu

Remembering Epeli Hau’ofa His Life and Legacy

Epeli Hau’ofa (1939-2009) played a crucial role in reimagining the place and status of the people of the Pacific Islands in the global community. Tongan by name, Papuan by birth, Tongan, Fijian, Canadian and Australian by education, and Fijian by citizenship, he embraced the lives of everyone whose destiny is wedded to Oceania. Yes, Oceania, a maritime continent whose islands are woven into a thriving web of seaways.

Scholar, satirist and founding director of the Oceania Centre for Arts and Culture at the University of the South Pacific in Suva, Epeli Hau’ofa inspired an entire generation of fellow Oceanians, from poets to politicians and artists to academics. A trenchant critic of predatory development, he dedicated his life to the promotion of Oceanian ways of creating and transmitting knowledge.

Remembering Epeli Hau’ofa tells his story and it offers moving insights into the enduring legacy of the thoughts and actions of a man who, in the view of many of his contemporaries, was perhaps “the finest Pacific Islander of our times”.

The editors Vijay Naidu, Claire Slatter and Eric Waddell were contemporaries and close friends of Epeli Hau’ofa during the latter part of his life. Vijay and Claire spent all their professional careers at the University of the South Pacific, the one in Sociology and the other in Political Science, and they both reside in Suva (Fiji). Eric taught Geography at USP in the early 1990s and was a frequent visitor to the University thereafter. He lives in Québec (Canada).

Please place orders via the link below:

Pacific shop | University of Canterbury

Price: $50

Ordering info:

Pick up between Monday – Friday 10am – 4pm from room 401, level 4 of the James Logie building, University of Canterbury.

No returns or refunds.

Contact:

If you have any queries, please contact the Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies Office and Project Administrator, Holly Neave holly.neave@canterbury.ac.nz.

Visitor (10 September 2025)

Call for Papers

Call for Papers

Last issues of the Pacific Dynamics Journal

Volume 8, Issue 1 March 2024

Volume 7 Issue 1 March 2023

Volume 6 Issue 2 September 2022

Volume 6 Issue 1 March 2022

Volume 5 Issue 1 March 2021

Volume 4 Issue 1 March 2020

Volume 4 Issue 1 March 2020

Volume 3 Issue 1 August 2019

Volume 2 Number 2 November 2018

Volume 2 Number 1 June 2018

Volume 1 Number 2 November 2017

Volume 1 Number 1 July 2017

CONTACT US:

Room 403 James Logie Building
University of Canterbury,
Christchurch, New Zealand.

ISSN 2463-641X

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Link

About US

ISSN: 2463-641X

Pacific Dynamics is an online open access journal published by the Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies with the support of the UC Arts Digital Lab, University of Canterbury, New Zealand

Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies

The Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies (MBC) is a world leader in interdisciplinary research on the Pacific. We're at the forefront of publishing and disseminating knowledge on a wide range of issues related to Pacific peoples. Click here for more information

©2025 Pacific Dynamics | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb