When the Solomon Islands signed its 2022 security agreement with China, the international response focused on the geopolitical implications — Chinese naval access, strategic positioning, U.S. and Australian security concerns. The response mostly missed the more important story.
A government of 650,000 people, staffed by a professional analytical workforce smaller than many U.S. county departments, evaluated a complex bilateral security agreement with a major global power and signed it. Not because its leaders were captured or corrupt — but because the government did not have the institutional capacity to fully evaluate what it was signing. The analytical functions that large governments perform through dedicated specialized agencies — treaty analysis, strategic assessment, legal review of international obligations — had to be performed by generalist staff who cannot develop that expertise on a part-time basis.
This is the Pacific governance capacity gap. And it is the mechanism through which external actors — not only China, but any well-resourced actor with a specific agenda — systematically gain leverage over Pacific Island governments whose capacity to evaluate complex proposals is structurally constrained.
Why standard governance research misses this
The governance research produced by continental academic institutions focuses on democratic institutions, electoral integrity, rule of law, and anti-corruption frameworks. These are important. They are also insufficient for understanding how Pacific Island governments actually make security decisions under the capacity constraints that characterize small island governance.
ISPI's democratic resilience research focuses on the specific mechanisms through which capacity constraints translate into governance vulnerability — and on the specific interventions that strengthen institutional capacity at the policy analysis level where Pacific Island governments need it most.
The Pacific Islands Forum's 2025 Pacific Security Outlook identified institutional analytical capacity as the primary predictor of democratic governance resilience across Pacific Island nations. ISPI's research on democratic resilience in Pacific Island nations builds on this finding with practitioner-grounded analysis of what capacity development actually requires in small island government contexts.
ISPI's Democratic Resilience and Governance Stability in Pacific Island Nations white paper is available as a free download. Governments, international organizations, and foundations commissioning Pacific governance research can contact ISPI at ISPIGlobal@proton.me. The Governance and Global Policy FAQ addresses the most common research questions directly.