| 
  
  
    Overview | 
  
  
    | 6.1  | 
    The joint DFAT/AusAID submission highlights a  number of peace-building and community and civil society1 development activities that the Australian aid program supports in the Pacific.  These include: 
   - in the Solomon Islands, as a practical peace  dividend, over 700 community level activities in all provinces to improve the  provision of education, health, water supply and road maintenance;
 
         
       
      - in PNG, the Community Development Scheme which  gives grants to organisations like the Peace Foundation Melanesia (providing mediation  and restorative justice training to village court magistrates and village peace  officers) and the PNG Church Partnership Program (where Australian faith-based  organisations support their PNG church counterparts to deliver health and  education services);
 
         
       
      - in Vanuatu,  the Wan Smolbag Theatre which educates communities about development issues  through plays about environmental, social, health and human rights matters;
 
         
       
      - women's crisis centres in Fiji  and Vanuatu and  a family support centre in the  Solomon    Islands, that provide counselling and  advocacy  services for victims of  domestic violence and sexual abuse;
 
         
       
      - assistance to the United Nations Development  Program in Suva to analyse sources  of conflict in the Pacific;
 
      the Regional Rights Resource Team in Suva,  a regional legal literacy project aiming to enhance the legal and social status  of women in various Pacific island countries; and 
       
       
      - through  the Australian Human Rights Small Grants Scheme, funding local organisations in  Tonga, Samoa  and Fiji to  train women, youth, teachers, police and church ministers in human rights.  The Scheme has also been used to build  capacity for female candidates for elections in the Solomon Islands and Tonga.2
 
  | 
  
  
    | 6.2  | 
    The White Paper states that the aid program will  make continued and increased use of the non-government community as a delivery  mechanism for Australian aid, mainly through the Australian NGO Cooperation  Program which facilitates collaboration between the government and accredited  NGOs.3   | 
  
  
    | 6.3  | 
    A new  initiative Mobilising New Australian  Links to the Region will tap into the skills and experience of the broader  Australian community to contribute to the region’s development.4 This will include greater support for  community-based organisations that lack the formal arrangements needed to meet  AusAID’s accreditation standards, to qualify for smaller amounts of project funding,  and using professional bodies and business links more.  One option being explored is linking  Australian schools with schools abroad to deepen children’s perception of  themselves as global citizens.5        | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Recognition of civil society | 
    
  
    | 6.4  | 
    At a Canberra  hearing, ACFID acknowledged that there  has been an absolute dollar increase in funding for the AusAID-NGO Cooperation  program from 0.9% to 1.2% of the total aid budget.  However, in ACFID’s view, the value of civil  society partnerships remains an underutilised asset: 
  … it seems odd, given the strengths that Australia can draw on  in this area (we have this whole fabric of connections, not only through the  churches, but through service clubs and business links and so on), that we have  about the lowest proportion of support of any of the OECD countries for civil  society type mechanisms using the aid program ... Our American and Canadian  colleagues do proportionally four times more than we do this way.6  | 
  
  
    | 6.5  | 
    In their written submission, ACFID referred to  their members’ expertise and long-standing relationships in many Pacific island  countries and argued that making greater use of the NGO sector was more  cost-effective relative to using ‘for-profit’ contractors.7   | 
  
  
    | 6.6  | 
    At the Sydney  hearing, the Red Cross said that, in their opinion: 
      References to civil society partnerships are largely absent from  the White Paper.8   | 
  
  
    | 6.7  | 
    Further: 
      The Australian aid program should explicitly recognise and  strengthen the role of civil society as a partner in delivering health and HIV  services.9   | 
  
  
    | 6.8  | 
    The Red Cross described the positive impact that  one of its AusAID- supported health awareness projects, the Solomon Islands  Health Awareness Project, has had in remote parts of the Solomon Islands, 
      … that  set of activities has led to a reduction in community tensions and building of  peace in those communities.10  | 
  
  
    | 6.9  | 
    AusAID told the Committee that it already had a  track record in supporting civil society development in a range of Pacific  island countries but the agency intends to do more, despite the fact that it  was not always an easy area for an external donor to become engaged in.11  | 
  
  
    | 6.10  | 
    In its supplementary submission, AusAID outlined  a number of civil society strengthening activities which it is currently  supporting.  In addition to those already  mentioned in paragraph 6. 1, these include: 
      - a five-year $4.5 million Community Partnership  Program in Vanuatu for building the capacity of key organisations with local  legitimacy, including the National Council of Chiefs and Transparency  International; and
 
         
       
      - an Electoral Support Program which has funded  civil society organisations to carry out voter awareness campaigns in the lead  up to the 2007 election and a Media for Development initiative that supports  civil society to produce media content dealing with development issues in PNG.12
   | 
  
  
    | 6.11  | 
    AusAID reiterated that civil society is an  important partner in service delivery and that it will continue to provide  support for civil society— including churches—to work in partnership with  governments to deliver essential services, and to consult all stakeholders  during the development of its programs.13   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Consultation | 
    
  
    | 6.12  | 
    The Committee asked Oxfam and Red Cross to  characterise their level of consultation with AusAID.  Oxfam said: 
  … there is quite a healthy dialogue at the moment between our  executive director and program director with [AusAID’s director-General] and  senior staff.14  | 
  
  
    | 6.13  | 
    Similarly, the Red Cross indicated that it had a  professional and positive relationship with AusAID and that while differences  may arise from time to time on specific technical matters they are able to be  resolved, based on respect for the expertise and capacity brought by both  parties.  Moreover, there is a common  desire to reduce poverty and vulnerability in the region.15   | 
  
  
    | 6.14  | 
    The Office for Women told the Committee that it  had welcomed the invitation from AusAID to contribute to the development of  AusAID’s gender policy.16   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Media | 
    
  
    | 6.15 | 
    In his submission to the inquiry, Mr   Brown, editor of the Avaiki news agency in  the Cook Islands pointed out that radio services were an  important means for ordinary citizens to access governance information.  Mr Brown  declared that underinvestment in public broadcasting services throughout the  Pacific had impacted on the quality and quantity of production output, and in  his view, more support for independent media was also required.  He recommended that additional funding be  allocated to redress the various technical deficiencies.17   | 
  
  
    | 6.16 | 
    At the hearing, the Committee asked AusAID to  comment on the status of the Pacific Media Initiative (PMI) which the  Australian Government previously funded.18 AusAID responded that it had been replaced in  recent years by the Pacific Media and Communications Facility (PMCF), which has  a $2.1 million allocation for 2004 through 2007 to build media capacity in the  Pacific.19        | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Small arms security | 
    
  
    | 6.17 | 
    In its submission to the inquiry, the Red Cross  refers to the destabilising effects the use of small arms and light weapons  have had in places like Bougainville, the Solomon    Islands and East Timor.20 The Red Cross notes that Australia  has been instrumental in weapons control in the region, however, it believes  that Australia  should take a stronger stance on restricting civilian possession of small arms.21        | 
  
  
    | 6.18 | 
    The Department of Defence informed the Committee  that it had constructed armouries through the region, in Fiji,  PNG, Vanuatu  and the Solomon Islands  and armoury projects were underway in Samoa and Tonga,  with plans for the same in Tuvalu  and Kiribati.22 Defence observed: 
      Had those armouries and magazines not gone ahead, then there  could have been a leakage of weapons from the police force or the defence  forces in the region to whoever wanted them.23        | 
  
  
    | 6.19 | 
    In addition to weapons security, Defence said it  undertook weapons stocktakes in the region, and had been supporting a major PNG  Defence Force stocktake: 
      We  did a muster in 2002, and since then all those weapons have been destroyed … as  I understand it, there were 3, 426 weapons recently destroyed.  That is a significant reduction in weapons.24  | 
  
  
    | 6.20 | 
    The Committee asked Defence to comment on the  extent of proliferation of small arms in the region, in particular in the PNG  Highlands where weapons have allegedly been lost from police armouries rather  than PNG Defence Force ones.25   | 
  
  
    | 6.21 | 
    Defence later supplied some information on these  matters.  The Department remarked that  proliferation of small arms in the region continued to be a significant concern.  Defence reiterated that its focus in PNG was  on developing the capacity of the PNG Defence Force and it worked to improve  their weapons storage, stock control and weapons management practices, as part  of an agreed bilateral project.  Defence  pointed out that leakage from armouries (be they Defence or police ones) was actually  only part of the broader and much more difficult challenge, which is the very  high ratio of private ownership of arms.   These include illicit weapons gained from other sources, namely criminal  networks (which by their nature are virtually impossible to count), and also  many lawfully held weapons. 
      Lawfully held civilian stockpiles of small arms in the Pacific  include 3.1 million firearms, or one privately held gun for every 10 people … this  surpasses the global ratio by 50%...26        | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Building people-to-people links | 
    
  
    | 6.22 | 
    The Australian Centre for Peace and Conflict  Studies (ACPACS) told the Committee that there has been a decline in  people-to-people exchanges in the Pacific over the years, particularly in PNG,  and in their view this needed to be addressed: 
      This is something that the Australian Strategic Policy Institute  pointed to in its [Strengthening our neighbour: Australia  and the future of PNG] report last year …
  
  … there is a real need to develop all sorts of diverse  opportunities for different kinds of people-to-people as well as  government-to-government encounters between Australia,  Melanesia, Polynesia and Micronesia.27  | 
  
  
    | 6.23 | 
    ACFID concurred: 
      On a microscale the Church Partnership Program has shown what can  be done … We do need to draw more actively on the pool of Australians [from]  churches, service clubs, trade unions, professional associations and NGOs.28   | 
  
  
    | 6.24 | 
    Several submissions and witnesses supported the  notion of forming denser networks of exchanges between Australians and Pacific  Islanders, for development reasons and to promote a deeper cultural understanding  and appreciation between the respective cultures.  Some of the possible means to achieve this  have been elaborated on elsewhere in this report, such as a seasonal labour  mobility scheme (see Chapter 2), AusAID scholarships (see Chapter 4) and the  PNG Church Partnerships Program (Chapter 5).   Other ways, including already established as well as new professional  and educational linkages and exchanges, and support for greater women’s  participation in decision-making at village, provincial and national levels will  be explored further here.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Professional links       | 
    
  
    | 6.25 | 
    Defence told the Committee that it supported  training places for Pacific Islanders at the Australian   Defence College,  and Pacific Islander cadets worked together with Australian officers to learn  the core skills of their trade.29        | 
  
  
    | 6.26 | 
    Defence also runs an annual program called  ‘Exercise Puk Puk’ whereby Australian engineers work together with PNGDF  engineers on various construction projects throughout PNG.  Defence advised: 
  … it is a very visible and tangible sign of not only the ADF but  also the local soldiers contributing to their community and that is very well  received.30   | 
  
  
    | 6.27 | 
    Similarly, the AFP reported to the Committee  that it had begun incorporating Pacific   Island nations into its IDG training  faculty: 
      We have intentionally had Solomon Islanders join our training  faculty on three separate occasions and it has been an outstanding success.31   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Group partnership model | 
    
  
    | 6.28 | 
    ACFID says there is potential for various ‘group  partnerships’ (similar in concept to the PNG Church Partnership Program) to enhance  the aid program to the Pacific, particularly in respect of health services.  ACFID proposes for instance a Partnership  to Support Pacific People with Disabilities —a substantial disability  program to assist Pacific service providers, trainers and client support groups  by utilising Australian development and disability expertise.32   | 
  
  
    | 6.29 | 
    At the hearing, ACFID elaborated: 
      Through ACROD [Australia’s  National Disability Services peak body], the domestic disability organisation,  we have world-class expertise.  Linked  with ACFID we could do some wonderful things in the region.33   | 
  
  
    | 6.30 | 
    Subsequent to the hearing, ACFID informed the  Committee that ACFID and ACROD had created an Australian Disability and  Development Consortium (ADDC) which formalises their intention to work together  to build the profile of and improve disability services in the region.  One of the consortium’s first activities was  to hold a photographic exhibition on disability and development in the region at  Parliament House in Canberra in  February 2007.34   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Centre for Democratic Institutions | 
    
  
    | 6.31 | 
    ACFID expressed concerns to the Committee that  the Centre for Democratic Institutions (CDI)35 has scaled back its involvement in supporting civil society in the Pacific.36        | 
  
  
    | 6.32 | 
    At a private meeting in late 2006, CDI told the Committee  that it had instigated a new mandate which focuses on strengthening (1)  political parties and (2) parliamentary governance in the region.37   | 
  
  
    | 6.33 | 
    In addition to producing research papers, some  of the CDI’s key practical activities, include: - the Political Party Development Course (PPD)—a  flagship training course which aims to give party officials and their equivalents in Australia’s  partner countries the skills to build stronger and more responsible party  organisations. Working closely with the major Australian parties, the PPD  course covers issues of party functioning such as candidate selection,  membership, campaigning, finance, media relations, issue management, the role  of parliamentary parties, and ensuring party discipline. PPD also feeds into a  range of more targeted, in-country programs working with political parties in Indonesia, Timor Leste and Melanesia;
 
   - the CDI Political Party Assistance Roundtable which  brings Australian policymakers and political party secretariats together with  the major international organisations working on political party assistance in  our region; and
 
      the annual Pacific Parliamentary  Dialogue whereby Pacific parliamentarians gather to discuss key challenges  facing the region.38    | 
  
  
    | 6.34 | 
    CDI invited the Committee to  participate in its 8th annual CDI Parliamentary Dialogue which was  held from 11-13th   December 2006 in Samoa.  These dialogues bring together Members of  Parliament from the Pacific Island  countries, Australia  and New Zealand to  discuss public leadership in the region. A special feature of the 2006 event  was a full-day’s program devoted to the subject of ‘women in parliamentary  politics.’  The Committee Chair  attended the conference and chaired a panel discussion on ‘Women in National  Leadership’.  The program, list of  participants and conference report can be downloaded from the CDI website.39  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Office for Women - strengthening women’s links | 
    
  
    Electing women to office | 
    
  
    | 6.35 | 
    The Office for Women notes that just 3% of the  region’s MPs are women.40 At  the Sydney  hearing, the Office for Women referred to the under-representation of women in  public office and the need to redress the balance: 
      There is a significant body of research that indicates that,  where the influence of women in public life is greater, the level of corruption  is lower. There is also research that  suggests that in order to influence parliamentary agendas, particularly in  areas such as health and educational welfare there does need to be a critical mass  of women parliamentarians—some say 15%-30%.41        | 
  
  
    | 6.36 | 
    The Committee heard that the Office for Women  (whose primary focus is on domestic issues facing women in Australia)  nonetheless makes a niche contribution to supporting women in the Pacific.  Working together with AusAID, DFAT and CDI, recent  efforts to build links between Australian and Pacific women leaders include: 
      - in September 2006, supporting female ministers  from East Timor and Tonga  and an election candidate from the Solomon    Islands to attend the annual  Commonwealth-State Ministers Conference on the Status of Women, known as MINCO;
 
         
       
      - in October 2006, arranging a side program of  events for the two female PNG participants in CDI’s inaugural Political Party  Development Course, consisting of meetings with Australian women  parliamentarians and the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission;
 
         
       
      - co-sponsoring with AusAID and DFAT a delegation  for 4 women from PNG to attend the APEC Women Leaders Network in June 2007; and
 
         
       
      - grants to Australian NGOs to build on their  activities in PNG, the Solomons and Timor-Leste to promote  women’s participation in leadership roles.42
    | 
  
  
    | 6.37 | 
    At the Brisbane  hearing, the Committee asked Dr Baines  to comment on the extent to which he thought CDI’s activities, including  bringing women out to Australia  for their courses on political party development and parliamentary  strengthening, are making a difference in terms of supporting women to stand  for office in the Pacific.43   | 
  
  
    | 6.38 | 
    Dr Baines  told the Committee that they certainly make a contribution.  He went on to describe the determination of a  group of women in Simbu province that had formed a coalition and ‘contested  every ward at election and every electorate that they could get a run in’.  Dr Baines  alluded to the very many difficult challenges that the women faced in trying to  get elected to public office but said that eventually: 
      They got one person up out of a field of 30-40 …44   | 
  
  
    | 6.39 | 
    At a private meeting with the Committee, Ms  Robyn Slarke (human rights advocate, village courts magistrate trainer in the  Highlands of PNG, and independent documentary-maker) showed excerpts from her  films which include first-hand accounts of the many obstacles that women face standing  for election to the PNG Parliament and their bravery in persisting in the face  of a lack of resources, violent intimidation by men and fear of retribution.  The film also attested to the difference that  women parliamentarians like Dame Carol Kidu, PNG’s Minister for Community  Development, Women, Religion and Sports, are making to their community and  country.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Linkages between Australian and Pacific women parliamentarians | 
    
  
    | 6.40 | 
    At the Sydney  hearing, ways to strengthen networks between Australian women parliamentarians  and Pacific women parliamentarians were discussed. The Office for Women  acknowledged the participation of several Australian female parliamentarians in  CDI activities as well as others, and said it saw its role as facilitating  access to people who would be most useful. The Office for Women said that: 
      The feedback that we have had from those [visiting] women is  that it is incredibly morale boosting and they draw lots of ideas from how  different Australian women leaders look at issues.45  | 
  
  
    | 6.41 | 
    The Committee acknowledged that engagement had  been somewhat ad-hoc but there were practical challenges to consider with  pursuing more formal regional networks, like the logistics of travel within the  region.46   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Indigenous connections | 
    
  
    | 6.42 | 
    The Committee wanted to learn to what extent  links were being made between indigenous women in Australia  and women in the Pacific.  The Office for  Women said that women in the Pacific had expressed keen interest in this area: 
      The women that have come here from the Pacific have shown a real  interest in what is happening in [the Office of Indigenous Policy  Coordination]—our colleagues in FaCSIA—in the women’s leadership area … We  [are] talking about what opportunities there might be to forge some linkages  with their Indigenous Women’s Leadership Program.47   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Pacific expertise  | 
    
  
    Pacific studies at Australian universities | 
    
  
    | 6.43 | 
    At the Brisbane  hearing, the Committee asked Pacific Studies  lecturer, Dr Quanchi to comment on the level of interest amongst Australian  students for learning about the Pacific.   Dr Quanchi  replied that Pacific studies was less popular than Asian or European studies at  his university, however there was certainly interest.  Dr Quanchi  teaches approximately 100 students each semester, and Pacific studies is also  taught at several other Australian universities, including Griffith   University, James   Cook University  and the ANU.48 Dr Quanchi  acknowledged that while his  
      field work courses were particularly popular, these were limited, for practical  reasons, to countries where there were flights available, at reasonable prices.49        | 
  
  
    | 6.44 | 
    The Fijian High Commissioner to Australia, His  Excellency Mr Naidu informed the Committee that there had been a reduction in  the size of the Pacific Studies Department at the ANU since the seventies and  eighties as the focus had shifted to Asia, however DFAT was directly funding  several important programs like the [State, Society and Governance in Melanesia  project]50 and the CDI, both at the ANU.51        | 
  
  
    | 6.45 | 
    Both Dr Quanchi and the Fijian High Commissioner  observed that there appeared to be a resurgence of interest in Pacific studies,  with the ANU soon to commence undergraduate courses to complement its  postgraduate ones, and the establishment of an International Centre of  Excellence in Asia-Pacific Studies (ICEAPS), also at the ANU, which aims to  develop a network which will promote excellence and collaboration in Asian and  Pacific studies across Australia and internationally.52 One of the first steps of the ICEAPS has been  to form a national association to represent the interests of Pacific   Island scholars, the Australian  Association for the Advancement of Pacific Studies (AAAPS).53 A Steering Committee comprised of academics  from different states has been formed to progress the formation of the AAAPS.54        | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    DFAT and AusAID | 
    
  
    | 6.46 | 
    At the Brisbane  hearing, it was suggested by some witnesses that specialisation in Pacific  issues is not encouraged within DFAT and AusAID in the same way that specialisation  in Asian issues is.  The Asia Pacific  Business Council claimed that: 
      There is only a handful of people who you could say have developed  genuine Pacific expertise and who are able to draw on that in developing advice  for the government.55  | 
  
  
    | 6.47 | 
    At a subsequent hearing, DFAT refuted the  claims: 
  … I am thinking of people I know and, for example, the current  High Commissioner in the Solomon Islands  worked in the Pacific Division before he went there.  The High Commissioner in the Solomons  came back to a job in the Pacific Division … the Special Coordinator of RAMSI  went as High Commissioner to Fiji.56  | 
  
  
    | 6.48 | 
    DFAT elaborated on the range of factors that contributed  to staff turnover.  Not least, every  three years people at posts will change, because Australia  has a posting system. The Department said it tried to balance drawing on  expertise with ‘refreshing with new blood’ and that there was very good expertise  in the Pacific Division, with people coming back from the Pacific to working on  issues [in Canberra].57   | 
  
  
    | 6.49 | 
    AusAID added that overseas posts generally had  significant numbers of longstanding very qualified locally engaged staff that  provided a degree of continuity.58   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Australian Youth Ambassadors for Development | 
    
  
    | 6.50 | 
    Every year, the Australian Youth Ambassadors for  Development (AYAD) Program places 400 skilled young Australians (aged 18-30) on  short-term assignments (3-12 months) in developing countries across the Asia  Pacific region. AYADs work with local counterparts in partner host organisations  across a diverse range of sectors including education, environment, gender,  governance, health, infrastructure, rural development and trades. The program aims  to strengthen mutual understanding between Australia  and the countries of the Asia-Pacific region and make a positive contribution  to development.59 Other similar AusAID supported programs like  the already mentioned ABVs (see Chapter 3), Australian Volunteers International  (AVI)60 and Volunteering for International Development from Australia (VIDA)61 offer older more experienced Australians the opportunity to share skills and  build relationships with people in developing countries in the region.        | 
  
  
    | 6.51 | 
    As mentioned in Chapter 1, the Committee met  with a small group of returned Australian Youth Ambassadors in Canberra (who  had had placements in Fiji, Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands), to discuss their  experience of the AYAD program.  | 
  
  
    | 6.52 | 
    The AYADs with whom the Committee spoke felt they  gained as much as they had contributed to the program and that it was a mutually  worthwhile program for the AYAD and host organisation.  | 
  
  
    | 6.53 | 
    At a Canberra  hearing, the Committee noted that it had long been an avid supporter of the AYAD  program and particularly its engagement in the Pacific.62   | 
  
  
    | 6.54 | 
    The Fijian High Commissioner agreed: 
      The feedback that we have is that it is a fantastic learning  opportunity both for the youth ambassadors and for the young people … whatever  areas they are assigned, they are making a huge dent.63  | 
  
  
    | 6.55 | 
    The National Library of Australia’s submission indicated  that it had been working together with AusAID to promote library-based  positions for the AYAD scheme in the Pacific, and observed that this approach  had proved more successful than previous programs that had brought librarians  to Australia for short training programs: 
      There are few trained librarians in most Pacific countries, so  longer-term training, as well as impartial assessment of existing services and  aid opportunities, as is occurring through AYAD placements is proving more effective  than narrowly focussed short courses.64   | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Pacific Islander Youth Ambassador Scheme | 
    
  
    | 6.56 | 
    The Committee asked the Fijian High Commissioner  for his views on ACFID’s suggestion to establish a reverse AYAD scheme65 whereby young Pacific Islanders would be invited to Australia  to be Pacific youth ambassadors in a similar way that Australians are placed in  host organisations overseas.66 The High Commissioner voiced his support for such a program: 
      I think it will be a great idea to have a youth exchange in that  way through youth ambassadors.67        | 
  
  
    | 6.57 | 
    According to ACFID there would be tremendous value  in hosting young Pacific Islander graduates in government departments, NGOs or  the private sector here in Australia.  It could also help dispel notions that the  aid program was all one-way: 
      That would show too that we are not just saying, ‘Okay, our  young people can go out there and teach you something’ ... I think it would  strengthen relationships.68   | 
  
  
    | 6.58 | 
    The PNG Students’ Association submitted that in  their view short term placements for Papua New Guineans in the Australian civil  service would be very valuable, and suggested that perhaps these attachments could  be facilitated through the AusAID scholarship program: 
      Much can be gained from exposure.  Seeing how things are done elsewhere and then  applying those methods, suitably adapted, in PNG.69   | 
  
  
    | 6.59 | 
    Oxfam was similarly enthusiastic about the value  of Pacific Islanders being placed in Australian organisations: 
      As an ex-employee of Australian Volunteers International, I  think it is an idea whose time has come.   It was always bothering me when I was [working overseas as a volunteer]  that we were sending Australians [abroad] and there was not the opportunity to  reciprocate.70   | 
  
  
    | 6.60 | 
    Oxfam added that such a scheme could complement  its international youth partnerships program well, by allowing Pacific  Islanders to have a more substantial work placement in its Australian office: 
      Our own experience shows that where they come and work in our  office with our staff [as part of Oxfam’s international youth partnerships  program] the value to both parties is enormous.71  | 
  
  
    | 6.61 | 
    ACFID suggested that the most practical way to  establish the Pacific Islander Youth Ambassador Scheme may be to link it with  the existing AYAD scheme.72   | 
  
  
    | 6.62 | 
    The Committee is mindful that it is a  requirement of the Australian public service that employees are citizens or  permanent residents and that this may preclude placements in an Australian  government department or agency, under current visa arrangements. However the  Committee is encouraged by and supportive of the Australian Foreign Minister’s  recent remarks to the effect that he is considering expanding opportunities for  Pacific public servants to gain experience through temporary work placements in  Australia.73  | 
  
  
    | 6.63 | 
    The Committee notes that organisations like  Rotary and academic institutions already provide for a range of cultural  exchange opportunities.  And, the  Committee is aware that Pacific Islanders can apply for DEST Endeavour Awards  which facilitate short term placements in Australian organisations.74   | 
  
  
    | 6.64 | 
    That said, the Committee is supportive  in-principle of the concept of a reverse AYAD/Pacific Islander Youth Ambassador  scheme, whereby young skilled Pacific Islanders could apply for  stipend-supported placements in host organisations within Australia.  | 
  
  
    | 6.65 | 
    The Committee appreciates that a new visa class  and/or special arrangements may need to be created in order to accommodate such  a scheme, especially with respect to secondments in the Australian public  service.  | 
  
  
    | 6.66 | 
    It is the Committee’s view that a reverse AYAD  program could fill a niche by providing skilled young Pacific Islanders with  valuable work experience in their fields of expertise and interest in Australia,  to take home.  A Pacific Youth Ambassador  Scheme would add value to the educational and other opportunities that already  exist for young Pacific Islanders. Moreover, a cultural exchange of this type would  build personal contacts and cooperation between Australians and Pacific  Islanders and our respective governments—essential for goodwill between our nations  into the future.  | 
  
  
    Recommendation 5      The Committee recommends that the Australian Government  consider establishing a Pacific Island Youth Ambassador Scheme (similar to and  possibly linked with the Australian Youth Ambassador Scheme, or AusAID  scholarships), whereby young skilled Pacific Islanders can apply for placements  in an Australian host organisation workplace for the purpose of work experience  and cultural exchange.  | 
    
  
    | 1  | 
    ‘Civil society’ includes organisations  such as registered charities, development non-governmental organisations,  community groups, women’s organisations, faith-based organisations,  professional associations, business associations, coalitions and advocacy  groups. Source:  London  School of Economics Centre  for Civil Society, http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/CCS/what_is_civil_society.htm Back | 
  
  
    | 2  | 
    Submission No. 6, DFAT/AusAID, pp. 8-9, and  Wan Smolbag website,  http://www.wan-smolbag-theatre.org/ Back | 
  
  
    | 3  | 
    White Paper, p. 64. Back | 
  
  
    | 4  | 
    White Paper, pp. 64-65. Back | 
  
  
    | 5  | 
    White Paper, p. 65. Back | 
  
  
    | 6  | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, ACFID, p. 10. Back | 
  
  
    | 7  | 
    Submission No. 18, ACFID, p. 2. Back | 
  
  
    | 8  | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Australian Red Cross, p. 27. Back | 
  
  
    | 9  | 
    Submission No. 9, Australian Red Cross, p.  4 and Transcript, 2 May 2007,  Australian Red Cross, p. 28. Back | 
  
  
    | 10  | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Australian Red Cross, p. 28.  See p. 13 for more details of the Health  Awareness Project in the Solomon Islands. Back | 
  
  
    | 11  | 
    Transcript, 27 February 2007, AusAID, p. 14. Back | 
  
  
    | 12  | 
    Supplementary Submission No. 32, AusAID,  p. 7. Back | 
  
  
    | 13  | 
    Supplementary Submission No. 32, AusAID,  p. 7. Back | 
  
  
    | 14  | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Oxfam, p. 21. Back | 
  
  
    | 15  | 
    Correspondence from Australian Red Cross, 07/05/07. Back | 
  
  
    | 16  | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Office for Women, p. 15. Back | 
  
  
    | 17  | 
    Submission no. 13, Avaiki News Agency. Back | 
  
  
    | 18  | 
    Transcript, 27 February 2007, AusAID, p. 18. Back | 
  
  
    | 19  | 
    Supplementary Submission No. 32, AusAID,  p. 9. Back | 
  
  
    | 20  | 
    Submission No. 9, Australian Red Cross, p.  20. Back | 
  
  
    | 21 | 
    Submission No. 9, Australian Red Cross, p.  4. Back | 
  
  
    | 22 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, Department of Defence, p. 20. Back | 
  
  
    | 23 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, Department of Defence, p. 23. Back | 
  
  
    | 24 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, Department of Defence, p. 23. Back | 
  
  
    | 25 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, Department of Defence, p. 23. Back | 
  
  
    | 26 | 
    Supplementary Submission No. 30,  Department of Defence, p. 3. Back | 
  
  
    | 27 | 
    Transcript, 26 October 2006, ACPACS, pp. 3 - 4. Back | 
  
  
    | 28 | 
    Transcript, 27 November, ACFID, p. 5. Back | 
  
  
    | 29 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, Defence, p. 26. Back | 
  
  
    | 30 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, Defence, p. 25. Back | 
  
  
    | 31 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, AFP, p. 40. Back | 
  
  
    | 32 | 
    Submission No. 18, ACFID, p. 3. Back | 
  
  
    | 33 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, ACFID, p. 7. Back | 
  
  
    | 34 | 
    Supplementary Submission No. 28, ACFID, p.  2. Back | 
  
  
    | 35 | 
    CDI responds to the needs of developing  countries, concentrating on good governance and democratic institutions, with a  focus on the Asia-Pacific region.  CDI  receives its core funding from AusAID and is based at the ANU. Back | 
  
  
    | 36 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, ACFID, p. 5. Back | 
  
  
    | 37 | 
    Details of the CDI’s mandate, training  courses and other activities can be found on their website, http://www.cdi.anu.edu.au/ Back | 
  
  
    | 38 | 
    CDI website, http://www.cdi.anu.edu.au/activities/Activities_HOME.htm Back | 
  
  
    | 39 | 
    http://www.cdi.anu.edu.au/asia_pacific_region/2006-07/2006_12_AP_PRO_8thPacPD_Samoa.htm Back | 
  
  
    | 40 | 
    Submission No. 21, Office for Women, Table  on Women’s Political Representation in Pacific Island Countries: Source IPU  2006, p. 6. Back | 
  
  
    | 41 | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Office for Women, p. 12. Back | 
  
  
    | 42 | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Office of Women, pp. 13-15. Back | 
  
  
    | 43 | 
    Transcript, 26 October 2006, p. 34. Back | 
  
  
    | 44 | 
    Transcript, 26 October 2006, p. 34. Back | 
  
  
    | 45 | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Office for Women, p. 16. Back | 
  
  
    | 46 | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, pp. 17 - 18. Back | 
  
  
    | 47 | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, p. 17. Back | 
  
  
    | 48 | 
    Transcript, 26 October 2006, Dr   Quanchi, p. 43. Back | 
  
  
    | 49 | 
    Transcript, 26 October 2006, Dr   Quanchi, p. 42. Back | 
  
  
    | 50 | 
    See the State, Society and Governance in  Melanesia Project website for details, http://rspas.anu.edu.au/melanesia/ Back | 
  
  
    | 51 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, Fijian High Commissioner to Australia,  p. 37. Back | 
  
  
    | 52 | 
    See ICEAPS website for details, http://iceaps.anu.edu.au/ Back | 
  
  
    | 53 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, Fijian High  Commissioner to Australia, p. 37 and Transcript, 26 October 2006, Dr Quanchi,  p. 41. Back | 
  
  
    | 54 | 
    See ICEAPS website,  http://iceaps.anu.edu.au/pacific.html Back | 
  
  
    | 55 | 
    Transcript, 26 October 2006, p. 61. Back | 
  
  
    | 56 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, DFAT, p. 16. Back | 
  
  
    | 57 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, DFAT, p. 17. Back | 
  
  
    | 58 | 
    Transcript, 9 February 2007, AusAID, p. 16. Back | 
  
  
    | 59 | 
    AYAD website, http://www.ayad.com.au/ Back | 
  
  
    | 60 | 
    See AVI website, http://www.australianvolunteers.com Back | 
  
  
    | 61 | 
    See VIDA website, http://www.vidavolunteers.com.au Back | 
  
  
    | 62 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, p. 35. Back | 
  
  
    | 63 | 
    Transcript, 27 November   2006, Fijian High Commissioner to Australia, p. 36. Back | 
  
  
    | 64 | 
    Submission No. 26, National Library of Australia,  p. 2. Back | 
  
  
    | 65 | 
    See Submission No. 18, ACFID. Back | 
  
  
    | 66 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, p. 35. Back | 
  
  
    | 67 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, Fijian High Commissioner to Australia,  p. 36. Back | 
  
  
    | 68 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, ACFID, p. 7. Back | 
  
  
    | 69 | 
    Submission No. 35, PNG Students’  Association, pp. 4-5. Back | 
  
  
    | 70 | 
    Transcript, 2 May 2007, Oxfam, p. 25. Back | 
  
  
    | 71 | 
     Transcript, 2 May 2007, Oxfam, p. 25. Back | 
  
  
    | 72 | 
    Transcript, 27 November 2006, ACFID, p. 7. Back | 
  
  
    | 73 | 
    Speech for the Biennial   Sir Arthur Tange   Lecture on Australian diplomacy, Australia’s  Commitment to the Pacific, The Hon. Alexander Downer, MP, Minister for Foreign  Affairs, 
8 August 2007,p. 13, http://www.foreignminister.gov.au/speeches/2007/070808_tange.html Back | 
  
  
    | 74 | 
    See the DEST Endeavour Programme website  for details: http://www.endeavour.dest.gov.au/ Back |