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  • Patrick D. Nunn, The Conversation

    Sidelining God: Why Secular Climate Projects in the Pacific Islands are Failing

    July 7, 2017 By Wilson Center Staff
    File 20170516 11937 132doih

    This article, by Patrick D. Nunn, was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

    Unless you are cocooned in a tourist bubble, it is hardly possible to miss God when you visit the Pacific Islands. In every village and on every main street there seems to be a church or temple, packed to bursting point on holy days. It is testament to the considerable influence of spirituality on the way people live in the Pacific.

    Yet almost every well-intentioned outside agency – including those of foreign governments such as Australia and the European Union – that seeks to help the region’s people adapt to the effects of future climate change is drawing up its plans in secular ways, and communicates using secular language.

    Over some 30 years, most such interventions have failed, proving neither effective nor sustainable. The answer to the question “why” may in part lie in the sidelining of God.

    At this point, conversations with representatives of donor organisations often become awkward. Why, they ask, should spirituality have any role in a problem like climate-change adaptation or disaster risk management, which is so clearly framed in human, secular terms?

    The answer lies in who does the framing. Far fewer people in most donor programs are spiritually engaged than in the Pacific.

    Continue reading on The Conversation.

     For more on the importance of faith communities to climate diplomacy in small island states, watch or attend our event on Monday, July 10th.

    Patrick D. Nunn is Professor of Geography for the Australian Centre for Pacific Islands Research and Sustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine Coast.

    He acknowledges his collaborators in this project: Dr Kate Mulgrew, Dr Bridie Scott-Parker and Professor Doug Mahar (University of the Sunshine Coast), Professor Don Hine and Dr Tony Marks (University of New England), and Dr Jack Maebuta and Dr Lavinia Tiko (University of the South Pacific).

    Sources: AccuWeather, Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research, Climate Change, The Conversation, Fiji Bureau of Statistics, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Tongo Department of Statistics, World Council of Churches

    Photo Credit: Seaphotoart/Shutterstock.com.

    Topics: adaptation, climate change, development, environment, international environmental governance, religion, risk and resilience, small island states

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