Peck, P.J.2007-11-121982-04-012007-11-121982http://hdl.handle.net/10625/7100ThesisThesis, University of British Columbia, 1982Discusses the phenomenology of tradition, of development and of change as applied to an aid programmeme in Fiji, while tracing a parallelism between Christianization and world development as a central theme. Emphasizes the implementation of the YMCA rural work programme as a relationship between the international agency and the recipient community through the rural worker as native agent. The development aid programme is seen as analogous to the missionization of Fiji. Includes a bibliography.Text1 digital file (408 p. : ill.)Application/pdfenAID PROGRAMMESDEVELOPMENT AIDRURAL DEVELOPMENTFIJIMISSIONARIESCOLONIALISMVOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONSTRADITIONAL CULTUREQUALITY OF LIFECULTURAL CHANGEETHICSCHRISTIANITYEUROPEANSPROJECT IMPLEMENTATIONLEADERSHIPDEVELOPMENT THEORYMissionary analogues : the descriptive analysis of a development aid program in FijiThesis