- Conservation in small island states is portrayed as a political and administrative challenge shaped by limited land, scarce resources, and external pressures, where development choices often carry irreversible consequences.
- In Fiji, protected areas were expected to deliver conservation, public access, cultural continuity, and economic value at once, while facing storms, fires, invasive species, and illegal extraction with limited capacity.
- Elizabeth Erasito’s career at the National Trust of Fiji centered on making protection work in practice, managing a modest but significant network of parks and heritage sites with an emphasis on monitoring and enforcement rather than expansion.
- She argued that parks should remain accessible and grounded in everyday life, and that short-term development gains rarely justified long-term damage, valuing steady institutional endurance over visible triumphs.
The work of conservation in small island states is rarely abstract. It is shaped by land that is limited, institutions that are thinly resourced, and pressures that arrive from far beyond national borders. Decisions about forests, rivers, reefs, and historic sites are often framed as technical choices, but they are more often political ones, balancing development promises against damage that cannot easily be reversed.
In Fiji, those tensions were especially visible in the management of protected areas and heritage sites. National parks were expected to serve several purposes at once: conservation, public access, cultural continuity, and economic opportunity. They were also expected to endure storms, fires, invasive species, and illegal extraction, frequently with too little staff and money. Holding those contradictions together required patience, administrative skill, and a tolerance for slow progress.
One of the figures who spent much of her working life doing exactly that was Elizabeth Erasito. She joined the National Trust of Fiji in 1997 and rose to become its director, a position she held for more than two decades. Under her leadership, the Trust managed a small but symbolically important network of parks and historic places, from coastal dunes to forest reserves and archaeological sites. Her focus was less on expansion than on making protection function in practice.

She spoke plainly about constraints. Monitoring, she argued, mattered more than declarations. In public remarks she described the need for practical tools to track encroachment, fires, invasive species, and illegal sand mining. Conservation, as she practiced it, was administrative work carried out over long periods, often far from attention.
She also resisted the idea that nature protection was separate from everyday life. Parks, she said, were meant to remain open and accessible, places where people could find space and well-being as well as biodiversity. That view reflected a broader belief that land was not merely a resource, but part of a continuing relationship between people, history, and place.
Erasito was wary of development framed as inevitability. “Although the lure is often too great to say no to development,” she once observed, “the short term benefits will never outweigh the long term damage.” It was a position shaped by experience rather than rhetoric.
Her work did not produce dramatic reversals or grand announcements. It produced boundaries held, sites maintained, and institutions that continued to function. In conservation, that kind of result is often the point.
Erasito died in October 2025, aged 57.
A shorter version of this piece was published here on Dec 27.