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Schworer, Doris Bacalzo – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2012
Among the Wampar in Papua New Guinea, children are active participants in the dynamics of kinship and identity construction. This article explores the transformative capabilities of children of interethnic marriages, particularly those with non-Wampar fathers. It examines children's notions of belonging and rights through their practices and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Relationship, Group Membership, Children
Stevens, Mike; Owens, Chris – Australian Science Teachers' Journal, 1998
Discusses how the mining of gold has impacted the development of both Australia and Papua, New Guinea. Outlines the essential chemistry of small scale mining, the impact of gold on the economy, and the environmental effect of mercury on both the miners and the environment. (Author/CCM)
Descriptors: Chemical Engineering, Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, Economic Factors
Palmer, W. P. – Online Submission, 1989
What criteria should be used to include or exclude particular topics within a country's science curriculum? It will be argued here that gold/gold mining is a suitable and relevant topic for inclusion in PNG's science curricula and suggestions towards achieving that end will be offered. The teaching of the mining of copper ore and the metal's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Chemistry, Science Curriculum, Science and Society
Ponnamperuma, A. C. W.; Palmer, W. P. – Online Submission, 1987
Papua New Guinea is a young, developing nation, achieving independence in 1975. Industries which can be classified as chemical industries by western standards, are almost non-existent in Papua New Guinea. As yet, most of the raw materials it produces are exported to other countries to be processed or manufactured into useful products. However,…
Descriptors: Mining, Chemistry, Foreign Countries, Developing Nations