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Vanua

Vanua is a term used in Fiji and other Melanesian contexts to denote land or homeland, and, more broadly, the social fabric surrounding a people and their territory. In Fijian, vanua encompasses both the physical land and the community—the people, their ancestors, and their customs—united in a shared identity and rights over resources.

Historically and in contemporary practice, vanua refers to a complex social unit that includes land tenure,

Geographically, the term appears in toponymy. The Fiji island of Vanua Levu, meaning "Big Land," is the

Beyond Fiji, vanua appears in other Melanesian languages and toponyms, such as Vanua Lava in Vanuatu, where

customary
governance,
and
ceremonial
obligations.
The
concept
underpins
iTaukei
customary
law
and
is
tied
to
the
authority
of
chiefs
and
elders
who
administer
land
and
resolve
disputes
within
the
vanua.
Access
to
and
management
of
land
and
fisheries
often
involve
family
or
chiefly
mataqali
groups
within
the
vanua.
second-largest
island
in
the
country
and
is
part
of
the
Vanua
Levu
group
in
the
Northern
Region.
The
name
reflects
the
association
of
land
and
community
central
to
vanua.
it
also
denotes
land
or
homeland
in
local
languages.
The
term
thus
signals
a
shared
cultural
emphasis
on
land,
identity,
and
communal
responsibility
across
parts
of
the
Pacific.