This course lies at the heart of postgraduate studies in Pacific Studies at the University of Auckland. It aims to give students a deeper understanding of Pacific Studies as an (inter)discipline, an understanding of its constituent parts, its intellectual and institutional genealogies, its diversities, and its challenges. It also explores some specific iterations of Pacific Studies and a few of its key debates. The course begins with an exploration of Pacific Studies genealogies, discussions of Indigenous knowledge and frameworks, and engagement with the wider politics of knowledge production about the Pacific. We then turn to key topics and debates, which may include gender and sexualities; cultural production; racialisation; political contests and sovereignties; diaspora and transnationalism; globalisation, commodities, and extractive policies; and the futures of Pacific Studies and Pacific communities, among other relevant topics. By turning to some of the ideological and theoretical underpinnings of Pacific Studies, attending to its development and history, and surveying new developments, Pacific 700 offers students a robust foundation for future study in the Pacific that is useful inside and outside the discipline.