Fair enough, Joe, but I think those are just boilerplate statutes inherited from their U.K. rulers, and written with the intent of preventing fraud.
As for whether the doings of any new family will be noticed, there's a matter we should put to rest:
Pitcairn is an island culture, and on a very small island at that. From what I've read (including some of The Pitcairn Miscellany), everyone knows each other and every venture is a cooperative one. Daily life is a near-constant string of community projects, and so while on-island the residents are, of necessity, rather like a tight-knit family. If you're even allowed to stay it'll be because they've already spent time with you, gotten to know all your affairs, and decided that you're okay.
The test for admission to the island, as implied in the Repopulation Plan document, is whether the handful of people there warm up to you or shun you as an outsider. And I suspect that comes down in the end to attitudes and personalities.
As for whether the doings of any new family will be noticed, there's a matter we should put to rest:
Pitcairn is an island culture, and on a very small island at that. From what I've read (including some of The Pitcairn Miscellany), everyone knows each other and every venture is a cooperative one. Daily life is a near-constant string of community projects, and so while on-island the residents are, of necessity, rather like a tight-knit family. If you're even allowed to stay it'll be because they've already spent time with you, gotten to know all your affairs, and decided that you're okay.
The test for admission to the island, as implied in the Repopulation Plan document, is whether the handful of people there warm up to you or shun you as an outsider. And I suspect that comes down in the end to attitudes and personalities.