 territories in the Pacific. I'm JN Squire, and I'm a French Wikimedia and member of Wikimedia France and contributor to the Wikipedia in French since 2009, and also Wikipedia comments. So we'll see on the next slide please. First, what are the French Pacific islands? And on the next slide we begin to see some quick facts about them. Next slide please. Nope, you're supposed to show maps. I think it's an old version you got. You might have to reload the slides. Yes, I'm going to share my screen. This screen sharing, screen sharing. Yes, Clipperton Island. Yes, this is correct. So yes, first Clipperton Island is the first and we'll never talk more about it. It's an habitat. There is no one living there. It's tiny. And so it's out of the scope of this session. So next slide we are going to see where is New Caledonia. New Caledonia is a collectivity, a little special with three provinces and then communes municipalities below them. And then on the next slide we will see about French Polynesia. It also has an organization with communes and nothing between the name of the collectivity and this. And on the next slide we also see about Wallis and Futuna, which are very special because it's the only place in France when you will have kingdoms with elect kings ruling for the customs of the people living there. So then let's move on to more facts on the next slide with quick facts. So first for history, what you saw are the remains of the former second French colonial empire. It was colonized during the 1800s to secure them away from European powers and also to harvest things like Nicaragua and Nicaragua. Instant French citizenship got granted for Polynesian from treaties and it was after World War II to the other collectivities. There are some independence movements in New Caledonia and French Polynesia, so they kind of might have, they haven't succeeded yet. More on geography speaking, there are three types of islands, volcanic and coral, which are usual and also continental, with a grande terre which is an island and it's part of a continent named Zelandia and it's also attached to New Zealand. There are a lot of coral reefs, New Caledonia has the second biggest coral barrier in the world. It's protected under UNESCO. There are various kinds of administrative divisions that have been seized already. Climates are ranging from equatorial to tropical with some dry, some humane and two temperate too. And on the next slide, we also see about, on the next slide, yes, people, so there are native peoples like Canucks in New Caledonia, Polynesians, Wallisians, people from many immigration waves, from Europe, Asia, Wallis, internal migration between the collectivities, Polynesians too. There are many different languages and cultures, some are frequent. In economy, it's mostly still extractive, kind of like during the colony, like with Niquel in New Caledonia, Pearls in Polynesia, fishing. There are Burgess transfers from European mainland and you develop hand phones. They are developing tourism. There is a welfare structure copying part of the French mainland and there are levels of employment. On the next slide, we'll see about the state of knowledge and Wikimedia projects. And we'll jump on to the next slide. Thank you. So you can see here a commune municipality named Farino and it's located in New Caledonia and you can see already in the table of contents. There are some issues, some like some kind of content for about everything that is on the main road. And also you can see there but the article is very short on many essential topics. And on the next slide, we'll see a little more of this. So there are threats to knowledge in the Pacific Islands and the digitized sources are rare or difficult to find without knowledge or local context or the right academic publications. There are European-centric views. For example, some digitized resources are from colonial times and promote dated views. There is a recent content located on more specific portals for paywalls or paper only. There are dated information on our analysis. Same issue with digitized sources. There are also historical and current settlement sites are mostly located near the sea and are frequent by global climate change. There are frequent native and current cultures and local biodiversity to unique spaces. On the next slide, we see also contribution issues with the diced distance, thousands of kilometers away from the mainland. There is a sea between islands and sometimes hundreds of kilometers. It takes multiple times from the mainland. It takes a couple of our flights with at least one connection in Asia or America. There are physical, geographic accessibility issues too. Some places are accessible only for boats and money is costlier too with thousands of euros for travel and accommodation to deliver workshop there. There is logistic needs with PC, smartphones to take pictures. Internet access libraries with local real-world sources to site too. On the next slide, we can see population density issues too with a bit of inhabitant on some islands. Everything is located in administrative capitals. And the rest is kind of less developed. There are inhabited islands such as Clipperton of course and also archipelagos, islands such as Tuvalu, a lot of the islands. You can access only them through expeditions and sometimes thanks to the French army. Also, you have less structures like glams. On the next slide, we'll see a different kind of database because semi-autonomous territories got their own local databases with more details than the national one. For example, for law, we got Legifron, JoyDoc and Lexpol. For statistics, we got INSEE and EC and ESPF and for local heritage. It depends on how rich the local entities are. Some got their own website and for others you need to parse the local views and decrease for the rest. And on the next slide, we see what initiative we can take. And at first on the next slide in Europe and France where it's cheap and faster to infuse it from the already existing volunteers from the mainland. But he has a more limited range and impact. We can do something in person like in Paris with the Delegation de la Prolignesie Française and in La Maison de la Nouvelle Calidonie. There are remote training and workshops possible too. And improving Wiki projects page presentations and listing useful resources there. And you can see what the Maison de la Nouvelle Calidonie, House of New Calidonia, looks like on this slide, on the next slide. And on the next slide, you can see their library with some very useful documentation there and sources for example Wikipedia. Next on place, there is a wide range and impact slower and slower and costlier. The solution we could partner with big local organizations such universities and the Académie des langues canac languages, Académie. Paternary with stricture in Europe too, for example, well, Maison de la Nouvelle Calidonie, there are links with people going from mainland France to New Calidonia. That's why in-person training and workshops with as much glam on Wikipedia as possible on Wikipedia, comments, visionary, etc. We can do more Wikimedia advocacy to local actors and develop local Wikimedia user groups for a better autonomy there so they can keep to meet each other. That's all, we have questions, we have ideas and thank you for watching. Thank you, thank you. Anyone? Well, my question would possibly be what the organization is doing for the local languages and these communities have brought, I mean, there's obviously not only French being spoken, but you also mentioned some other languages. What is the organization doing to support these other language communities that exist overseas? Well, currently there are things being done in French Vienna, in southern America, so there are French communities, there are Creole communities there too and I don't have the detail about the natives. I think we have to ask Wikimedia France directly about this. And for the rest currently there has been nothing done yet for the Pacific because I've already reached the Maison de la Nouvelle Calidonie in Paris, but unfortunately their director died recently. So there we are going through reorganization. And I'm going to send emails to do remote workshops and physical ones in New Caledonia. So there are groups of editors in the Pacific, in French Pacific? Currently, nothing organized, maybe some people there and there sometime, but currently none. So there is a need to do something from the mainland, maybe. Other questions? There are three minutes left. I believe there is no other questions. One last question? No. Thank you very much. Thank you for your session and wishing you a lovely day. Thank you. Bye.