VIS 2026VIS 2026 — Virtual Island Summit|Also: GSIS 2027GSIS 2027
Island Innovation Logo
About
Services
The Network
Events
Content Library
Contact Us

Subscribe to our newsletter. By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy.

Island Innovation

Island Innovation works with governments, institutions, and partners worldwide to support island-led sustainable economic development.

We Support The UN Development Goals

SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and InfrastructureSDG 11: Sustainable Cities and CommunitiesSDG 12: Responsible Consumption and ProductionSDG 13: Climate ActionSDG 14: Life Below WaterSDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals

Explore

AboutServicesNetworkEvents

Content

ArticlesNewsCareers

Ready to Connect?

Join the island innovation community

Get in Touch

About

  • About us
  • Case Studies
  • FAQs
  • Press
  • Careers
  • Contact

Services

  • Services Overview
  • Public & Media Relations
  • Strategic Communications

Network

  • The Island Network
  • Academic Council
  • Newsletter

Events

  • Our Events
  • Watch Past Events

Content

  • All Content Library
  • Videos
  • Articles
  • News
Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceContact

© 2025 Island Innovation. All rights reserved.

    News

    Curated stories and analysis from islands and sustainability leaders worldwide.

    Filter by Core Theme

    All ThemesCircular EconomyClimate ActionConnectivity & DigitizationCulture & CommunityEnergy & TransportGreen Finance & EconomyOcean & BiodiversityPolicy & GovernanceTourism & Remote WorkWater & Food
    Showing 9 of 386 news items in Culture & Community
    Is Ireland becoming a cultural superpower?
    Culture & CommunitySeptember 2, 2025

    Is Ireland becoming a cultural superpower?

    Excerpt from artbasel.com They say that if you throw a stone in Ireland, you will hit a writer. But these days, you will just as easily hit a world-renowned visual artist, a subversive rap group, an Oscar-winning actor, or a prominent director. Authors such as Oscar Wilde, James Joyce, Edna O’Brien, Anne Enright, and many others have paved the way for the country’s current artistic boom, with creatives of all stripes, from Cillian Murphy to Hozier, flying the flag on the global stage. Its art world, too, is dense with talented individuals. In the remote reaches of Ireland’s northwest, collaborative duo Ruth Clinton and Niamh Moriarty have been making visual art for over a decade. Both are originally from Dublin but moved away from the capital as rents began to rise and studio space became unaffordable. Their work engages strongly with Ireland, but pushes against idealized visions of the country, testing the possibility for creating ‘a new narrative identity for Ireland and the Irish diaspora.’

    Read more
    12345678910
    History of Baltic Sea's Gotska Sandön includes both trade and piracy
    Culture & CommunityAugust 27, 2025

    History of Baltic Sea's Gotska Sandön includes both trade and piracy

    Excerpt from phys.org Gotska Sandön has long been regarded as a lonely and desolate place where people only occasionally hunted seals. But recent archaeological investigations reveal a considerably more complex history. Sabine Sten, Professor of Osteology at Uppsala University, and colleagues have made new discoveries about life on the island. The project, which Sten is running together with Professor Johan Rönnby from Södertörn University, started a few years ago and has already led to exciting findings. At Säludden on the island, researchers have unearthed a medieval burial site.

    Read more
    Island Vibes unleashes Tonga Tū Ketau Tuē: A celebration of Tongan identity and language
    Culture & CommunityAugust 26, 2025

    Island Vibes unleashes Tonga Tū Ketau Tuē: A celebration of Tongan identity and language

    Photo credit: pmn.co.nz Excerpt from pmn.co.nz Vibes are high as a tsunami of red reaches the shores of Aotearoa to celebrate Uike Kātoanga’i ‘o e lea faka-Tonga - Tonga Language Week. Auckland-based nine-piece band, Island Vibes, has welcomed the rush of MMT pride with the release of their latest song, Tonga Tū Ketau Tuē. Written entirely in Lea Faka-Tonga, the song strengthens the legacy of Tongan music traditions and evokes the atmosphere of the kava circle.

    Read more
    How Bad Bunny concerts fuel Puerto Rico’s independence movement
    Culture & CommunityAugust 26, 2025

    How Bad Bunny concerts fuel Puerto Rico’s independence movement

    Excerpt from thetimes.com The world-conquering singer is playing 30 dates on his struggling home island with songs demanding liberation and inspiring the youth

    Read more
    Summers on Kınalıada: The island that keeps Armenian culture alive
    Culture & CommunityAugust 26, 2025

    Summers on Kınalıada: The island that keeps Armenian culture alive

    Excerpt from armenianweekly.com Growing up Armenian in Turkey, my existence has never been passive. Rather, it has been an act of resistance. For as long as I can remember, each summer has meant packing my bags, boarding a ferry and crossing the Bosphorus to Kınalıada Island. The simple act of preparing for this journey—stuffing my suitcase and using my ferry card—serves as a quiet ritual of remembrance. It is a way of acknowledging Armenians’ past trauma while choosing to move forward, to heal in a place where beauty grows, to celebrate life. Kınalıada is that place. Upon arriving, the chatter at the dock shifts softly into Armenian and my soul exhales. As the tide crashes against the shoreline, I feel a calm wrap around me like a beach towel, one that only Kınalıada can provide—the freedom to be unapologetically true to who I am. Immediately, I am greeted with the word բարեւ (parev) by Armenians who live in other parts of Istanbul, throughout Turkey or some far-off place in the world. Suddenly, I am reminded that no matter how scattered we are, we all find a sense of belonging during our summer stays in Kınalıada.

    Read more
    Hoops for Equality in the Solomon Islands
    Culture & CommunityAugust 19, 2025

    Hoops for Equality in the Solomon Islands

    Photo Credit: about.fiba.basketball Excerpt from about.fiba.basketball Youth in Solomon Islands united through basketball, music, and workshops at the Basketball For Good Mini Festival, promoting gender equality, inclusion, and community empowerment. HONIARA (Solomon Islands) - More than 100 young ballers gathered at the Solomon Islands National Institute of Sport Indoor Court in Honiara last month for the Basketball For Good Mini Festival, a one-day event promoting inclusion, gender equality, and youth empowerment through sport. Held under the theme Hoops for Equality, the one-day event was a celebration of sport as a tool for inclusion, gender equality, and community connection, underpinning FIBA’s Strategic Priorities of Empowering National Federations and Women in Basketball.

    Read more
    Secret WW2 plan to liberate Channel Islands auctioned off
    Culture & CommunityAugust 19, 2025

    Secret WW2 plan to liberate Channel Islands auctioned off

    Photo credit: bbc.com Excerpt from bbc.com A copy of the top secret plan for the liberation of the Channel Islands at the end of World War Two has sold at auction for more than three times its expected price. The 50-page document, codenamed Operation Nestegg, was discovered in a cardboard box in Derbyshire in the UK. Auctioneers Hansons described it as a ""piece of history"" before it went under the hammer earlier. The top guide price was £1,200 but the winning bid at the auction in Etwall was £3,800.

    Read more
    Rising seas could put Easter Island’s iconic statues at risk by 2080
    Culture & CommunityAugust 19, 2025

    Rising seas could put Easter Island’s iconic statues at risk by 2080

    Excerpt from aljazeera.com About 50 other cultural sites in the area are also at risk from flooding. Paoa, who is from Easter Island – a Chilean territory and volcanic island in Polynesia known to its Indigenous people as Rapa Nui – and his colleagues built a high-resolution “digital twin” of the island’s eastern coastline and ran computer models to simulate future wave impacts under various sea level rise scenarios. They then overlaid the results with maps of cultural sites to pinpoint which places could be inundated in the coming decades. The findings show waves could reach Ahu Tongariki, the largest ceremonial platform on the island, as early as 2080. The site, home to the 15 towering moai, draws tens of thousands of visitors each year and is a cornerstone of the island’s tourism economy. Beyond its economic value, the ahu is deeply woven into Rapa Nui’s cultural identity. It lies within Rapa Nui National Park, which encompasses much of the island and is recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The roughly 900 moai statues across the island were built by the Rapa Nui people between the 10th and 16th centuries to honour important ancestors and chiefs."

    Read more
    From Scars to Shelter: Jamaica Transfers Land to Rastafari Elders.
    Culture & CommunityAugust 11, 2025

    From Scars to Shelter: Jamaica Transfers Land to Rastafari Elders.

    Photo credit: TheStKittsNevisObserver.com Excerpt from thestkittsnevisobserver.com The Jamaican Government has handed over two pieces of land in Albion, St. James, to the Rastafari Coral Gardens Benevolent Society (RCGBS). These lands will be used to build a permanent elder care home for members of the Rastafari community. The handover ceremony took place at the Office of the Prime Minister on August 4. It is part of a broader effort to make peace with the Rastafari community after the violence at Coral Gardens in 1963, where several Rastafarians were injured or killed by police. Culture Minister Olivia Grange said the events of 1963 left deep scars—physical, emotional, and psychological. She praised Prime Minister Andrew Holness for apologising in 2017 and taking action, even though the events happened before he was born. In 2019, the government set up a trust fund with $122 million to help the 35 known survivors. A temporary home was also built to provide shelter and medical help. The newly transferred land will be used to offer long-term support to Rastafari elders, even after the Coral Gardens survivors have passed.

    Read more