“…Of course, if they had remained part of the GEIC, as they were in their guise as the Union Islands from 1916 to 1926, then they would comprise a far more central part of this discussion. One imagines they would have sided with Tuvalu in seceding in 1975, but as it is, through the strokes of an administrative pen that first included and then excluded them, they simply illustrate the contingency of colonial history Kiribati, despite a colonial history shared with Tuvalu, lacks the migration links that its former associate has managed to cultivate Bedford, Bedford and Ho, 2010). Though it has mounted an increasingly sophisticated campaign to draw international attention to its situation, Kiribati has yet to achieve the same level of public awareness as Tuvalu and, because it is so much larger, it has the added burden of appearing to be a less tractable problem.…”