Academic literature on the topic 'Fiji coup 2000'

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Journal articles on the topic "Fiji coup 2000"

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Mason, Anthony. "The media and the coup leader: Sitiveni Rabuka." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 11, no. 2 (2005): 227–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v11i2.1058.

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Brigadier-General Sitiveni Rabuka, the former prime minister of Fiji who gained notoriety for staging twin coups in 1987, has enjoyed a love-hate relationship with the Fiji and Pacific media for almost two decades. University of Canberra PhD student, Anthony Mason, interviewed Rabuka in the course of his research into Australian media coverage of the coups. He also interviewed the former editor of The Fiji Times, Vijendra Kumar. Pacific Journalism Review is publishing the transcripts of these interviews, where both Rabuka and Kumar reflect on the May 1987 coup and its aftermath—helping to put the May 2000 coup into perspective.
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Collins, Craig, and Jon Fraenkel. "Conflict Prevention in the Commonwealth: The 2000 Fiji Coup." International Negotiation 17, no. 3 (2012): 449–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718069-12341239.

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Abstract The Republic of Fiji experienced three armed coups in less than twenty years – 1987, 2000, and again in 2006 – symptoms of inter-communal tensions in the country and a political, economic and social system unable to manage them. The Commonwealth, through the good offices of its Secretary-General, was the lead international actor in responding to the crisis that followed the 2000 coup. The following study provides an overview of the Commonwealth as an institution, with a focus on its conflict prevention capacity, through the lens of its actions in Fiji at the time. It seeks to identify the nature and impact of Commonwealth engagement, highlighting potentially useful lessons regarding the institution, the individuals who acted on its behalf, and the efficacy of their actions.
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Weber, Eberhard. "Looking north or looking anywhere? Indo-Fijian international relations after the coups of May 2000 and December 2006." Bandung: Journal of the Global South 4, no. 1 (2017): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40728-017-0039-4.

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Between 1987 and 2006 Fiji experienced four coups in which Governments were overthrown by their military forces or parts of it. After the fourth coup in December 2006 old metropolitan friends such as Australia, New Zealand, the USA and the EU responded with travel sanctions, cancellation of military cooperation and frozen development assistance. When Fiji was politically isolated it fostered secondary political friendships of olden days and established new ones. The paper searches for evidence of Fiji’s agency to change the structure of its International Relations (IR) after the coup of 2000. Such relations were first shaped in Prime Minister Qarase’s ‘Look North’ policy, but following the coup of December 2006 Fiji’s IR took a new quality once political isolation was overcome and internal power stabilized. The paper concentrates on Indo- Fijian relations, which, however, are embedded in Fiji’s general effort to achieve greater independence from old friends by forcing new international relationships. Of particular interest in this context is, if Fiji’s political orientation after 2006 has just been a temporary necessity born out of political isolation or if Fiji’s policy of fostering South–South relations will remain a decisive element of the country’s foreign policy in the long term. To understand IR in the context of Fiji and India it is essential to look at both countries, their interests and agency. Looking at Fiji alone would leave the question unanswered, why Indian Governments had an interest to cooperate with the country in the Pacific Islands despite hard-core nationalist anti-Indian sentiments and politics pursued in Fiji after the coup of 2000. It also won’t be conclusive why India should be interested at all to foster high profile relations with a tiny country like Fiji in a situation when Indian governments were aiming at much higher goals.
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Gounder, Christine. "Fiji 2000: Journalists and the George Speight coup." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 13, no. 1 (2007): 125–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v13i1.888.

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Much criticism of both the local and international media’s role during the May 2000 coup in Fiji emerged after the crisis. Critics included editors and journalists of the local and international media and political and historical analysts who knew the ‘real reasons’ behind the coup and did not see this being reported. This article analyses interviews with 17 journalists, 13 local four foreign reporters, who covered the coup, and their reaction to criticisms made against them over coverage. It also assesses possible effects on some journalists by the so-called Stockholm syndrome because of their close association with businessman George Speight and his fellow captors who held the Mahendra Chaudhry government hostage for 56 days.
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Duncan, Lynda. "Coup editorial content: Analysis of the Fiji 2000 political crisis." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 8, no. 1 (2002): 10–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v8i1.727.

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Both the Fiji Times and the Daily Post reinforced the colonial myth that Fijian chiefs are the rightful rulers of Fiji, emphasising that Fiji, and this presumably means Fijians, was not ready for a multiracial constitution.
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Ramesh, Sanjay. "Ethnocracy and Post-Ethnocracy in Fiji." Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 8, no. 3 (2016): 115–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.5130/ccs.v8i3.5185.

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Fiji’s history is interspersed with ethnic conflict, military coups, new constitutions and democratic elections. Ethnic tensions started to increase in the 1960s and reached its peak with violent indigenous Fijian ethnic assertion in the form of military coups in 1987. Following the coup, the constitution adopted at independence was abrogated and a constitution that provided indigenous political hegemony was promulgated in 1990. However, by 1993, there were serious and irreparable divisions within the indigenous Fijian community, forcing coup leader Sitiveni Rabuka to spearhead a constitution review. The result of the review was the multiracial 1997 Constitution which failed to resolve deep seated ethnic tensions, resulting in another nationalist coup in 2000 and a mutiny at the military barracks in December of that year. Following the failed mutiny, the Commander of the Republic of the Fiji Military Forces, Voreqe Bainimarama, publicly criticised nationalist policies of the government of Prime Minister Laisenia Qarase, culminating in another military coup in 2006. The new military government started plans to de-ethnise the Fijian state and promulgated a constitution that promoted ethnic equality.Post independence Fiji is characterised by these conflicts over ethnocracy. The ethnic hegemony of indigenous Fijian chiefs is set against inter-ethnic counter hegemony. While democratic politics encourages inter-ethic alliance-building, the ethnic hegemony of the chiefs has been asserted by force. Latterly, the fragmentation of the ethnic hegemony has reconfigured inter-ethnic alliances, and the military has emerged as a vehicle for de-ethnicisation. The article analyses this cyclical pattern of ethnic hegemony and multiethnic counter hegemony as a struggle over (and against) Fijian ethnocracy.
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Craddock, Patrick. "Fragments from a coup diary." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 15, no. 1 (2009): 45–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v15i1.964.

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Fiji has endured four coups in the past 22 years. On 10 April 2009, President Ratu Josefa Iloilo suspended the Constitution, sacked the judiciary, postponed any general election until 2014 and appointed himself as head of state. He reinstated 2006 coup leader Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama as interim Prime Minister, who in turn reappointed his cabinet in defiance of international condemnation. A censorship crackdown on the media and civil society followed. The author is a media educator and journalist who worked for a total of 11 years at the University of the South Pacific, including experiencing both the 2000 and the 2006 coups. He later returned to Fiji as social media educator for the National Council for Building a Better Fiji (NCBBF). The Council was critical of the media during the period it developed a draft of the People’s Charter. It recommended changes to the law to establish a Media Tribunal, which was also planned to encourage qualified local personnel for editorial, subeditorial and publisher positions; provide a wide diversity of local programmes for television media and develop community radio and community television through a media tax. While the People’s Charter was seen as a necessary and constructive contribution to the future of Fiji, the leadership of Bainimarama was questioned after the repeal of the constitution. This article, opening with the author’s open letter to Bainimarama after the Easter putsch, offers reflections from a coup diary.
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Bohane, Ben. "Fiji military exorcise ghosts." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 7, no. 1 (2001): 69–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v7i1.705.

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Fijians were at the polls in the final week of August 2001 following the George Speight attempted coup in May 2000], but with a court martial of rebel soldiers due, Fiji faced not just a divided society but also a divided military.
 Pictured: Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama in the Queen Elizaneth Barracks, Suva / Ben Bohane
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Hughes, Robert. "Fiji Islands: Failure of Constitutionalism?" Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 32, no. 4 (2001): 915. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v32i4.5863.

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On 19 May 2000 Fiji experienced its third coup in 15 years when a group lead by George Speight took hostage members of the People's Coalition government. While the coup itself was "a qualified failure", the aftermath left the constitutional situation in Fiji again in crisis.In this article, the author traces the historical, political, economic and legal factors relevant to the current constitutional situation in Fiji. The author then analyses the predominate constitutional issues facing Fiji. The author suggests that what is urgent is not so much an increased accommodation of indigenous interests in the written constitution, but rather the establishment of some sense of national identity capable of sustaining central government.
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van Fossen, Anthony. "George Speight's Coup in Fiji and White-Collar Crime in Queensland." Queensland Review 7, no. 1 (2000): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1321816600002026.

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The dangerous uncertainties and complications of George Speight's coup in Fiji have been partly formed by his association with white-collar crime in Queensland. Speight's involvement in at least one fraudulent financial scheme in Brisbane helped to shape the events leading up to his seizure of parliament and kidnapping of the elected government of Fiji on 19 May 2000. This parody ofa coup, led by Speight (a failed businessman with no military experience) and a small contingent of ascetic SAS-styled soldiers, soon to be joined by a gaggle of rustics and Suva's lumpenproletariat, was a spectacle of the unexpected. Speight's adventurism today imposes immense costs on the people of Fiji. His financial schemes when he was living in Brisbane left a number of victims in Queensland.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Fiji coup 2000"

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Williams, Beverley Anne Harwood, and bevwilliams@bigpond com. "The Advent of Methodism and the I Taukei: The Methodist Church in Fijian Nation-making." La Trobe University. School of Social Sciences, Sociology and Anthropology Program, 2008. http://www.lib.latrobe.edu.au./thesis/public/adt-LTU20091221.121517.

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This thesis is an historical anthropology of the role of the Methodist Church in Fiji, from the arrival of Methodist missionaries in 1830. At that time Fiji was a fragmented society. Fijians lived in villages on various islands, so there was no cohesion within the society. The insertion of Methodism into traditional Fijian society irreversibly changed the society, and this thesis traces the key changes that occurred. The rise to prominence of Chief Cakobau from Bau Island marks the beginning of unification of a fragmented Fiji. He formed the first Fijian government in 1871.The British Colonial authorities and the Methodists were also centrally involved in unification and the development of a national society as they set up structures to govern and evangelise the Fijians. However, the thesis argues that with the arrival of Indo-Fijians as indentured labourers to Fiji in 1879, the seeds of polarisation were planted and Indo-Fijians were left out of the frame of Fijian society. The thesis traces the involvement of Methodism, always in close relationship with the state in the twin processes of unification and polarisation. The coups that have changed the political landscape of Fiji served to alter the relationship between the Methodist Church and the state. A schism occurred in the Methodist Church following the 1987 coup, where violence against some ministers occurred, and the Methodist constitution was suspended. Members belonging to i taukei Methodist hierarchy who insisted on Fijian paramountcy to the exclusion of Indo-Fijians have been separated irretrievably from members of the Methodist hierarchy who believe in an inclusive society irrespective of race. Increasing diversity of socio-economic status allied with hierarchical divides and different interpretations of the Church�s mission have generated conflict in the Church and society at large. Diminution of the power of the Methodist Church in Fiji has occurred since 1987, and there are both internal and external factors at work which continue this trend. The various factors influencing the Church in the present along with its future prospects are discussed.
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Mason, Anthony. "Australian coverage of the Fiji coups of 1987 and 2000 : sources, practice and representation /." full text via ADT, 2009. http://erl.canberra.edu.au/public/adt-AUC20090826.144012/index.html.

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Woods, Brett Antony. "The Causes of Fiji's 5 December 2006 Coup." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Political Science and Communications, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2740.

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This thesis looks at the causes behind Fiji’s 5 December 2006 coup. It takes a twofold approach, first looking at the background causes which illustrate that Fiji was vulnerable to a further coup after the 2000 coup. The study then moves on to an analysis of the triggering causes. This analyses both the motive; consisting of threats to the military’s interests and failures of the government, and the opportunity, consisting of a deflation in the government’s legitimacy and military cohesion. To test these factors a cross-time comparison of the five instances of high tension between the Fijian military and Government is presented in an effort to identify how the coup differed from those disputes that preceded it. These periods of tension are: the 2004 reappointment of Bainimarama; the Unity Bill dispute; the January 2006 coup threat; the 2006 election; and the December 2006 Coup. From this analysis it was found that threats to the military’s interests were key in generating the motive for intervention, but that governmental failures were not a significant factor; while they motivated the military to be a vocal actor, they did not garner the motive for intervention. The opportunity was only found to occur when there was both a deflation in the Government’s legitimacy and strong military cohesion. For Fiji’s 2006 coup the motivating factors were the threats to the military’s interests, from the scheduled Supreme Court ruling on the role of the military, the rivalry with the fully-armed Tactical Response Unit of the Police, and crucially the pending criminal charges against Bainimarama. This coincided with the opportunity for intervention from a drop in the Government’s legitimacy as a result of a crisis in the multi-party Cabinet and the Government’s growing ethnic bias, along with strong cohesion in the military.
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Prujean, Flint. "The 2006 Fiji Coup: Engagement or Exclusion? Contrasting Reactions from New Zealand and the People’s Republic of China." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/5439.

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The emergence of China as a dominant force in international politics has challenged the traditional roles states have played in regions such as the South Pacific. The 2006 Fiji coup heralded a new era of competition in the region as PRC policy response conflicted with that of existing powers such as New Zealand. China continued to engage and expand its relationship with Fiji while New Zealand attempted to isolate the interim Fijian administration. This thesis looks at how New Zealand and PRC policy towards Fiji has clashed following the 2006 coup and assesses the implications for these powers as well as the long term stability of the region. New Zealand responded to the coup by placing strict sanctions on Fiji and lobbying the Pacific Islands Forum and the Commonwealth to suspend Fiji’s membership. Meanwhile, the PRC expanded its diplomatic, military and financial ties with Fiji and provided funding for the MSG, a frequent supporter of the Fijian regime.
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Cretton, Viviane. "Conflit et médiation à Fidji : "cérémonies du pardon" et enjeux du coup d'Etat de 2000." Paris, EHESS, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005EHES0175.

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Ma thèse analyse l'histoire en train de se faire à Fidji, à partir du coup d'Etat de 2000 et de ses enjeux politiques. Les connextions qui s'établissent entre le politique et l'ethnicité s'articulent au travers de diverses relations de genre, de statut, de parenté, ou de classe sociale, à différentes échelles, locales nationales et interbationales. En reliant les observations particulières et les mises en perspectives historiques, je restitue les multiples déclinaisons politiques de "la tradition" fidjienne - de sa codification pendant la colonisation à sa reconnaissance constitutionnelle. Déconstruire l'idée d'une homogénéité inhérente à la notion de "chefferie", emblème politique de "la tradition" pacifique, autorise simultanément à reconstruire l'hétérogénéité qui caractérise les chefs coutumiers fidjiens dans leur ensemble. Mon analyse de l'ethno-nationalisme fidjien montre que les volontés de distinction politique, sur la plan national, se construisent en interdépendance avec les normes et les valeurs partagées au niveau international<br>My thesis analyses the making of history in Fiji while reflecting the stakes of the 2000 coup d'Etat. The connections between politics and ethnicity articulate various kind of relationships such as gender, status, kin or social classes, all selected in situ for providing heuristic relevancy at different levels : local, national and international. My analysis links particular observations and historical examinations to restitute the multiple political versions of fijian recognition. Deconstructing the idea of an homogeneous chiefly system to be emblematic of the pacific way enlightens the heterogeneity that defines the fijian chiefs in general. I suggest in the end that ethno-nationalism in Fiji has to be understood as a political distinction that is built up interdependancy between shared norms and values across the national and international levels
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Mason, Anthony, and n/a. "Australian coverage of the Fiji coups of 1987 and 2000: sources, practice and representation." University of Canberra. Communication, 2009. http://erl.canberra.edu.au./public/adt-AUC20090826.144012.

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For many Australians, Fiji is a place of holidays, coups and rugby. The extent to which we think about this near-neighbour of ours is governed, for most, by what we learn about Fiji through the media. In normal circumstances, there is not a lot to learn as Fiji rarely appears in our media. At times of crisis, such as during the 1987 and 2000 coups in Fiji, there is saturation coverage. At these times, the potential for generating understanding is great. The reporting of a crisis can encapsulate all the social, political and economic issues which are a cause or outcome of an event like a coup, elucidating for media consumers the culture, the history and the social forces involved. In particular, the kinds of sources used and the kinds of organisations these sources represent, the kinds of themes presented in the reporting, and the way the journalists go about their work, can have a significant bearing on how an event like a coup is represented. The reporting of the Fiji coups presented the opportunity to examine these factors. As such, the aim of this thesis is to understand the role of the media in building relationships between developed and developing post-colonial nations like Australia and Fiji. A content analysis of 419 articles published in three leading broadsheet newspapers, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian and The Canberra Times, examined the basic characteristics of the articles, with a particular focus on the sources used in these articles. This analysis revealed that the reports were dominated by elite sources, particularly representatives of governments, with a high proportion of Australian sources who provided information from Australia. While alternative sources did appear, they were limited in number. Women, Indian Fijians and representatives of non-government organisations were rarely used as sources. There were some variations between the articles from 1987 and those from 2000, primarily an increase in Indian Fijian sources, but overall the profile of the sources were similar. A thematic analysis of the same articles identified and examined the three most prevalent themes in the coverage. These indicated important aspects of the way the coups were represented: the way Fiji was represented, the way Australia's responses were represented, and the way the coup leaders were represented. This analysis found that the way in which the coups were represented reflected the nature of the relationship between Australia and Fiji. In 1987, the unexpected nature of the coup meant there was a struggle to re-define how Fiji should be understood. In 2000, Australia's increased focus on Fiji and the Pacific region was demonstrated by reports which represented the situation as more complex and uncertain, demanding more varied responses. A series of interviews with journalists who travelled to Fiji to cover the coups revealed that the working conditions for Australian media varied greatly between 1987 and 2000. The situational factors, particularly those which limited their work, had an impact on the journalists' ability to access specific kinds of sources and, ultimately, the kinds of themes which appeared in the stories. The variation between 1987 and 2000 demonstrated that under different conditions, journalists were able to access a more diverse range of sources and present more sophisticated perspectives of the coup. In a cross-cultural situation such as this, the impact of reporting dominated by elite sources is felt not just in the country being covered, but also in the country where the reporting appears. It presents a limited representation, which marginalises and downplays the often complex social, cultural and historical factors which contribute to an event like a coup. Debate and alternative ways of understanding are limited and the chance to engage more deeply with a place like Fiji is, by and large, lost.
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Woods, Brett A. "The causes of Fiji's 5 December 2006 coup : a thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Arts in Political Science in the University of Canterbury /." 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2740.

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Books on the topic "Fiji coup 2000"

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William, Sutherland, ed. Government by the gun: The unfinished business of Fiji's 2000 coup. Pluto Press Australia, 2001.

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The 2006 military takeover in Fiji: The coup to end all coups? ANU E Press, 2009.

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Fraenkel, Jon. The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009.

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SPREP/WWF/Commonwealth Secretariat Regional Workshop (2000 Nadi, Fiji). Access to genetic resources and benefit sharing in the Pacific Islands region and preparations for CBD COP 5: SPREP/WWF/Commonwealth Secretariat Regional Workshop, 13-17 March 2000, Fiji. SPREP, 2000.

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The impact of coup-related sanctions on Thailand and Fiji: Helpful or harmful to U.S. relations? : hearing before the Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global Environment of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, One Hundred Tenth Congress, first session, August 1, 2007. U.S. G.P.O., 2008.

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Robertson, Robert, and William Sutherland. Government by the Gun: Fiji and the 2000 Coup. Zed Books, 2002.

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Robertson, Robert, and William Sutherland. Government by the Gun: Fiji and the 2000 Coup. Zed Books, 2002.

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Fraenkel, Jon, Stewart Firth, and Brij V. Lal, eds. The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.

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(Editor), Jon Fraenkel, and Stewart Firth (Editor), eds. From Election to Coup in Fiji: The 2006 Campaign and Its Aftermath. Asia Pacific Pr, 2007.

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Shimʻon, Frenḳel Yehonatan, and Firth Stewart, eds. From election to coup in Fiji: The 2006 campaign and its aftermath. Asia Pacific Press, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Fiji coup 2000"

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Speight, George. "CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT AND STATEMENT OF 22 MAY 2000." In Coup: Reflections on the Political Crisis in Fiji. ANU Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/c.12.2008.24.

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Field, Michael. "The media and the spectre of the 2000 coup." In From Election to Coup in Fiji: The 2006 campaign and its aftermath. ANU Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/fecf.06.2007.13.

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Lutua, Kuini. "The Fiji nurses’ strike." In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.12.

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Madraiwiwi, Joni. "Creating a stable Fiji." In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.24.

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Beirman, David. "Fiji: Political Coups, 1987 and 2000." In Restoring Tourism Destinations in Crisis. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003117148-9.

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Madraiwiwi, Joni. "Mythic constitutionalism: Whither Fiji’s course in June 2007?" In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.23.

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Fraenkel, Jon. "Fiji’s December 2006 coup: Who, what, where and why?" In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.03.

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Buadromo, Virisila. "The impact of Fiji’s 2006 coup on human and women’s rights." In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.26.

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Lal, Brij V. "‘This process of political readjustment’: The aftermath of the 2006 Fiji Coup." In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.04.

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Newland, Lynda. "Religion and politics: The Christian churches and the 2006 coup in Fiji." In The 2006 Military Takeover in Fiji: A Coup to End All Coups? ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mtf.04.2009.09.

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