On this page, you will find:
To find organisations working for LGBTQI+ rights, visit our Papua New Guinea LGBTQI+ Resources page.
To find organisations providing legal or other types of assistance to refugees in Papua New Guinea, visit our Papua New Guinea Legal Assistance page.
COI Experts
Email: dwj@uwo.ca
Dr Dan Jorgensen has four decades’ experience of research among rural Papua New Guineans in the western parts of the country, and has become alarmed by the recent spread of anti-witchcraft violence in areas where it was traditionally absent. He has since that time published on a serious outbreak in that region and has been monitoring news and other reports of similar instances in PNG. He has been particularly concerned by the widespread failure or inability of the authorities to respond to local crises and the human rights implications of a culture of impunity surrounding attacks on suspected witches and sorcerers. Among his most recent publications: “Changing minds: hysteria and the history of spirit mediumship in Telefomin” (2007); “Clan-finding and clan-making: legibility and the politics of identity in a Papua New Guinea mining project” (2007); “Hinterland history: the Ok Tedi mine and its cultural consequences in Telefomin” (2006); Third Wave evangelism and the politics of the global in Papua New Guinea: spiritual warfare and the recreation of place in Telefomin (2005); “The Garden and Beyond: the Dry Season, the Ok Tedi Shutdown, and the Footprint of the 2015 El Niño Drought” (2016); “Mining narratives and multiple geographies in Papua New Guinea: Ok Tedi, the emerald cave, and Lost Tribes” (2014); “Preying on those close to home: witchcraft violence in a Papua New Guinea village” (2014).
Email: na29@soas.ac.uk
Prof. Niki Alsford has extensive knowledge and experience working with Pacific Island nations. He is currently engaged in a longitudinal study of indigenous voices on climate change, and works closely with the Fijian community in the UK. He is Chair of the Austronesian Centre at the University of Central Lancashire and continues to work with the Council of Indigenous Peoples, Executive Yuan in Taiwan and the Shung Ye Museum of Formosan Aborigines in Taipei.
Email: gibbs199@gmail.com
Dr Philip Gibbs, Divine Word Missionary, STD Gregorian University, Rome, began studying traditional religion in Papua New Guinea in 1973 and has pursued that interest until now. Study of witchcraft and its effects have taken priority in the last ten years. In recent years Dr Gibbs has spent considerable time helping accused persons reach safety or to find personal and material support. Dr Gibbs is also involved in forming groups to raise awareness about the unacceptability of violence often associated with witchcraft accusations. He has published several articles on this subject, such “Engendered Violence and Witch-killing in Simbu” (Canberra: 2012); “Practical Church Interventions on Sorcery and Witchcraft Violence in the PNG Highlands” (Canberra: 2015); co-authored “Using Mobile Phones to Track Anti-Witchcraft Violence in Papua New Guinea” (ANU: 2015); “Confronting Sorcery Violence in PNG” (Canberra: 2015).
Email: victoria.stead@deakin.edu.au
Dr Victoria Stead is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Alfred Deakin Research Institute at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia. She has a Doctor of Philosophy from the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University. Her research interests are in the social transformations generated by globalisation, state- and nation-building processes in Papua New Guinea. Dr Stead’s research has explored land politics, development issues, and migration within PNG and the broader Pacific. Her current research examines the relationships between Papua New Guineans and asylum seekers resettled in the country under the Australian Government’s new Regional Resettlement (“PNG Solution”) policy.
COI Resources
Document link
This report by the Australian Government provides a country overview and has been prepared to inform refugee status determination processes. It includes background information on the country’s demographic, economy, and political system, and provides a breakdown of the convention grounds.
Papua New Guinea Legal Assistance
Find organisations offering legal and other types of assistance to refugees in Papua New Guinea.
Papua New Guinea LGBTQI+ Resources
Find organisations working for refugee LGBTQI+ rights in Papua New Guinea.
We are always looking to expand the resources on our platform. If you know about relevant experts, or you are aware of organisations and/or resources to include in our directories, please get in touch.
Last updated May 2023