
Contents
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Separation and Association Separation and Association
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Constitution and Compact Constitution and Compact
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Criticisms from Within Criticisms from Within
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Sea and Sky: Working for Micronesia Sea and Sky: Working for Micronesia
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The Referendum on the Draft Constitution The Referendum on the Draft Constitution
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The Election of 1979 The Election of 1979
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Pohnpei Me Kak Apwal Pohnpei Me Kak Apwal
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter explores the challenges to overcome on the road to self-government. The withdrawal of the Marianas and the increasingly likely departure of Palau and the Marshalls complicated negotiations over the draft compact of free association, and threatened the very prospect of self-government for the remaining islands. There were also the major differences with the United States over the relationship of the draft compact to the constitution as well as a myriad of legislative, administrative, and logistical matters involved in transitioning from a trust territory to an autonomous, self-governing entity. Tosiwo Nakayama urged his fellow citizens to “sail one canoe together through time and history.” In Nakayama's eyes, the metaphor of the canoe linked past, present, and future. The canoe of state, however, faced challenges and changing circumstances radically different from those encountered and successfully met by ancestral and immediately preceding generations.
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