Abstract

Western journalism educators can learn from Pacific island communicationpractices to improve ways of sharing knowledge across the tropics. Often Western journalists reporting on events in the tropics do so through a lens of parachute journalism. This paper analyses current Western journalism and communication practices in the Pacific and draws on concepts relevant to general communication such as talanoa and Habermas’s ‘Theory of Communicative Action’ (1989). Three key points are argued in this paper: firstly, that traditional communication practices in the South Pacific and Pacific region more generally, are alive, well, and highly relevant to Western journalistic practice; secondly, that parachute journalism has a high potential to damage communication practices in the South Pacific; and finally, that Western journalism education should embrace concepts such as talanoa in order to be better informed in policy and knowledge-based decision making processes in the South Pacific.As discussed through examples of the communication of issues of social justice and indigenous rights, innovative communicative approaches which take into consideration oceanic knowledge, along with applicable Western theoretical paradigms, have significance and merit for future media and communication professionals and educators.

Highlights

  • The first United Nations International Day of the Tropics was celebrated on 29th of June 2016

  • This paper aims to identify key components of Habermas’s approach to the ‘public sphere’ and ‘communicative action’ and will suggest that by combining these theories with Pacific concepts such as talanoa, it may be possible to gain a better understanding of journalism practices for professionals and educators in the Pacific region

  • Advances in communication technologies across the tropical Pacific will increasingly open up the region to Western influences

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Summary

Introduction

The first United Nations International Day of the Tropics was celebrated on 29th of June 2016. Sitiveni Halapua, Tongan scholar and Director of the Pacific Islands Development Program at the East-West Centre, University of Hawai’i, who deployed the idea of a ‘contemporary use of talanoa’ in Fiji and Tonga, stated during an interview for the SGI Quarterly in January 2007: If you give people the opportunity, and they know you respect their voice, they will tell you their stories; that is a universal human phenomenon.4 This suggests that ‘ideally’, and probably only ‘ideally’, some traditional Pacific practices offer an adequate platform and/or setting for communicative action to occur as these practices emphasise common goals, shared values, common decision-making and collective effort.

Talanoa Talking from the Heart
Conclusion
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