About This Book
A close anthropological account describes a Pacific island society in transition as customary law yields to external influences and modern institutions. Drawing on a decade of first-hand experience and official inquiries, the author combines ethnographic description, treatment of marriage practices, mythology and ancestor cults, land tenure and legal change, and ritual life, with analysis of factors behind population decline. Chapters interweave traditional sagas and ceremonies with the practical effects of administrative, missionary and commercial contact, tracing how long-standing social norms are altered and what consequences follow for communal authority, land rights and cultural continuity.
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