Edvard Hviding, Tim Bayliss-Smith
'This scholarly monograph furthers considerably our understanding of farming and forestry in the Melanesian region...It is an exemplary study, setting today's practices and problems in historical perspective. All persons interested in environmental issues in the Pacific region should consult this book, as a timely addition to the literature. Books of this stature demonstrate that pronouncements that the thoroughly researched monograph is dead are premature, they are the bedrock of serious scholarship.' Professor Paul Sillitoe, University of Durham, UK 'In Islands of Rainforest an anthropologist and biologist join their knowledge to that of the local people living in the forests, allowing us for the first time to know a tropical rainforest from the inside, as a lived environment, with history. This truly interdisciplinary viewpoint also makes better able to judge the fractured narratives that reach us from those presently contesting for a share in the forests' resources.' Frederick Barth '...will repay careful reading by anyone who wishes to understand something of the complexity of Melanesia in general and of the Solomon Islands in particular.' Pacific Economic Bulletin '...possibly the most comprehensive study of a single Solomons society published in recent years...this book is successful in documenting the great complexities in the dynamics of the struggle for resources and development in this particular society, but the points made are relevant much more widely...for some readers there may be too much detail on some topics, but this also makes the book a valuable reference source.' Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 'The authors have used a wide range of research techniques to bring these issues home in a highly effective manner...they have produced a superb study.' The Geographical Journal