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Contributors


JUDITH A. BENNETT is Associate Professor of History and Associate Dean of Graduate Studies (Humanities) at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand where she teaches courses on Pacific Islands' history and environmental history. She is currently working on two manuscripts: an environmental history of the Pacific Islands during World War II and a history of colonial forestry in the Western Pacific. Her publications include Wealth of the Solomons: A history of trade and plantations, Solomon Islands, c. 1800-1978 (Honolulu, 1987) and Pacific Forest: A History of Resource Control and Contest in Solomon Islands, c. 1800-1997 (Cambridge, 2000)

 
RHONDA CHANG graduated from Beijing Traditional Chinese Medicine University in 1983. For the last sixteen years she has had a TCM practice in Sydney, Australia. Currently she is a PhD student in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Sydney.

 
HUGH CRONE has a PhD in Natural Sciences (Biochemistry) from Cambridge. His long term association with the military through his career in the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation has given him a strong interest in the effect of the stresses of warfare upon soldiers. Among his publications are Chemicals and Society and Banning Chemical Weapons, both published by Cambridge University Press.

 
CHRIS DEGELING is a practicing veterinarian and a doctoral candidate at the University of Sydney. His research interests include epistemology in medicine and the use of animal models in surgical experimentation.

 
ANNE PEREZ HATTORI teaches Pacific History and Micronesian Studies at the University of Guam. A tenured Associate Professor in the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, she is a native Chamoru scholar born and raised in Guam who completed her doctoral program at the University of Hawai`i in 1999. Her publications include Colonial Dis-Ease: US Naval Health Policies and the Chamorros of Guam, published in the Pacific Islands Monograph Series of the Univ of Hawai`i Press in 2004.

 
RANI KERIN completed her PhD at the Australian National University in 2004 and lectures in Australian Indigenous history and Australian history at the University of Otago. Her research interests include twentieth century Aboriginal politics, humanitarianism and assimilation. She is currently writing a book about Charles Duguid based on her PhD thesis, 'Doctor Do-Good? Dr Charles Duguid and Aboriginal Politics, 1930s–1970s'. Her other publications include: An Attitude of Respect: Anna Vroland and Aboriginal Rights, 1947–57 (Clayton: Monash Publications in History, 1999).

 
ANNIE STUART completed her PhD at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, in 2002. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow with the 'History, Health and Hybridity: New Zealand and the Pacific' research cluster at the University of Otago. Current research is in the development of an indigenous Pacific Island medical profession.

 
ANGELA WANHALLA is a Lecturer in New Zealand and Maori history at the University of Otago. Her research focuses on the intimate history of colonialism in nineteenth century New Zealand. She is currently preparing a manuscript on the history of intermarriage in southern New Zealand.  


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