“…A concern for relational island geographies is prevalent today in a wide range of geographical locations; for example, in research on the Caribbean (Dash, 2006;Pugh, 2016;Sheller, 2009), China (Hong, 2017), Chile (Hidalgo et al, 2015), Taiwan (Tsai, 2003;Lee et al, 2017), New Caledonia (Korson, 2017), New Zealand (Kearns & Collins, 2016), Sardinia and Corsica (Farinelli, 2017), the Aegean , Oceania (Farbotko et al, 2016), and the archipelagic Americas (Roberts & Stephens, 2017), but also in research on archipelagic information systems (Vaitis et al, 2007), island literatures (Crane & Fletcher, 2017;Redd, 2017;Graziadei et al, 2017), island diasporas (Martínez-San Miguel, 2014), and translocal social movements (Davis, 2017). In many different ways there has been a concerted effort to radically decentre notions of the static island and instead emphasize mobile, multiple and interconnected relational forms (Baldacchino, 2006;Clark & Tsai 2009;Fletcher, 2011;Hau'ofa;2008;Mountz, 2015;Sheller, 2009;Steinberg, 2001).…”