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  • Series Samoan Environment Forum 2003 ; No.4
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  • Series Volume 1
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  • Keywords gender
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Samoan environment forum proceedings of the National Environment Forum 2001|Mulivai's smart house / Tu'u'u Ieti Taule'alo|Human resource development in Samoa - we are what we culture / Esekia Solofa|Traditional knowledge is the key to sustainable development in Samoa: examples of ecological, botanical and taxonomical knowledge / Namulauulu G.V. Ta'ana|Report of a household fisheries and dietary survey, October - November 2000 / Kelvin Passfield, Mike King, Atonio Mulipola and Etuati Ropeti|Quarantine's non-compliancy is a risk to Samoa's sustainable biodiversity / Kirifi Pouono|Sustainable forest management programmes in Samoa / Aukuso Leavasa|Urban planning and management in Apia - everybody's or nobody's business in 2002 / Paul Johnes and Jude Kohlhase|Tackling land degradation and unsustainable land use in Samoa - with emphasis on the agriculture sector / N.S. Tuivavagi, D.J. Hunter and F. Amosa|Knowing your environment - a survey of how Samoans view their environment / Maria Talaitupu Kerslake|Samoa's development paradox: diversification away from the agriculture - based economy / Tuaopepe F.S. Wendt|Planning for coastal hazards in Samoa / T'u'u'u Ieti Taule'alo and Tagaloa Bismarch Crawley
Available Online

Taulealo, Tu'u'u Ieti

,

Wulf, Violet

2002
Housing in Samoa has undergone tremendous change in the last fifty years. While smaller and less permanent traditional Samoan houses, or fale, are still being widely used the big open round- or oval-shaped fale with thatched roofs have been largely replaced by open rectangular structures with corrugated iron roofs. Within the rural villages more and more families are building European-style dwellings with internal facilities such as kitchens and bathrooms.