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Emma Sale

24 October 2024
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I am a Fijian with Melanesian and Polynesian descendants. My late mother is from Viwa, Bau, in Tailevu with maternal links to Namacu, Koro in Lomaiviti. My father is from Pago Pago in American Samoa, and has maternal links to Sawana, Vanua Balavu in Lau. I have lived in Fiji most of my life and spent 3 years in Samoa and a year in New Zealand.

I have been involved in development work over the last 25+ years supporting national and community level institutional strengthening and capacity building. I have worked in the Pacific region serving in various organizations (UNDP, UNFPA, SPREP, SOPAC) on climate change and environmental matters covering policy development and project implementation. One such project, i.e., the Climate Security in the Pacific Project, inspired me to undertake this PhD research. I currently work as an independent consultant and have undertaken several assignments for Pacific Island Countries through international and regional organizations. I own a small Fiji-registered consultancy firm called Pasifika Climate & Sustainability Consultancy (PCSC). For more details, please view.


PhD thesis topic: Climate Crisis and External (Cross-Border) Mobility: The Nexus between Policy Implementation and Indigenous Knowledge in the Pacific

This research involves an exploratory research study of the interconnections between policy implementation and indigenous knowledge for climate-change affected populations in the Pacific region. This research will provide a critical analysis of concepts, theories, frameworks, perceptions, actions, policies and strategies on external mobility for addressing existential threats of the climate crisis that are significantly impacting the vulnerable populations in low lying atoll States such as Kiribati, the Republic of Marshall Islands (RMI), and Tuvalu. It will focus on Tuvalu and will examine how the concept of external planned mobility policy could be approached through the lenses of indigenous knowledge and culture as a practical consideration to responding to the slow onset impacts of climate change. The research will examine how communities are currently being impacted by climate change, how the recent scientific projections confirm the alarming impacts of climate change, the extent to which external mobility could be considered as an adaptation option, and potential host countries that the climate change-affected populations could relocate to.

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