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The University of St. Martin Dean of Academics, Genѐve Phillip, won a partial scholarship to attend the 14th Annual Islands of the World Conference in Lesvos, Greece

Pond Island:--- Following a competition, the Island Resources Foundation presented the University of St, Martin Dean of Academics, Genѐve Phillip, with a partial scholarship to attend the 14th Annual Islands of the World Conference in Lesvos, Greece. The theme of the Conference which ran from May 23rd-27th , was “Island Identity - Niss(i)ology and Utopia”. Dean Phillip explained that Nissiology is a concept coined by world renowned island studies scholar, Grant Mc Call and it refers to “the study of islands on their own terms”.

Dean Phillip was among six researchers who received scholarships to attend the Conference. Of the approximately 150 global participants, Dean Phillip said that she was humbled to be among the six winners. The title of Dean Phillip’s paper was “Understanding ideational diffusion and island identity through a good governance paradigm”. The idea for the conference paper stemmed from her PhD thesis in which she focuses on problematizing and deconstructing universalistic governance norms in the island territories of Curacao, St. Maarten and Trinidad and Tobago. Sharing more about her research, Dean Phillip stated that “my work aims not only to problematize universalistic norms that are inconsistent with island nominated challenges but I also endeavor to provide formidable policy options and alternatives”.

In her presentation, Dean Phillip indicated that research participants in the named territories were generally responding to questions of governance in non-technical terms. Dean Phillip has already identified emerging themes in her PhD research which relate to questions of power, agency, capacity and education, which in turn have implications for the quality of governance that is attainable in the territories. “Ideas about what constitutes good governance can come as often as possible from the Hague, Brussels or the World Bank, if we do not get persons to talk about their perception of it and decide how it must translate into policy practice in the context of their own realities it will never work”. Dean Phillip intends to submit her conference paper to be considered for publication in the next issue of the Island Studies Journal.

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