In a recent article on the political and economic crisis in New Zealand, Bob Jesson has argued that the Labour governments of the 1980s were crippled by a contradiction between new right economics and liberal social policy. A similar, and indeed related, contradiction bears upon indigenous peoples -not just in Aotearoa but also in other white settler societies such as Australia, Canada, and Hawaii. On one side, indigenous cultures are widely legitimized and celebrated in liberal and consumer culture, but in an idealized form that maps uneasily onto the urbanized and apparently \u27acculturated\u27 way of life of most Maori. On the other hand, Maori have suffered disproportionately during the recession and are now unemployed in record number...
The author addresses some key issues confronting Māori women in respect of Treaty settlements and of...
This theoretical Kaupapa Māori writing inquiry study seeks to explore the settler colonial nature of...
The recycling of debates around welfare, violence and history in Settler-Indigenous Australian affai...
This article uses postcolonial theory to analyze the dynamic convergence of two significant internat...
This study examines the implications of the paradoxes evoked by the coexistence of a discourse of d...
This article positions Maori author Alan Duff in relation to the New Right free market economy which...
During the past several decades the dynamics of law and policy reform in Aotearoa/New Zealand have p...
If economic strategies are framed by culturally-bound collectives that draw on particular ideas, val...
This article takes issue with the claim made by Tremewan (2005a) that the New Zealand social scienc...
The central problem investigated here is the conflict between the predominant role that Maori women ...
Indigenous scholars constantly contend with deficit tendencies associated with the value and place o...
This paper compares labour market experiences of indigenous Australians and Maori since 1971 with a ...
Gender and ethnicity are recognised as two of the leading axes of marginality in late twentieth cent...
New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is inter...
This edition of Pacific Journalism Review has a gender theme. Sex is a fundamental divisio...
The author addresses some key issues confronting Māori women in respect of Treaty settlements and of...
This theoretical Kaupapa Māori writing inquiry study seeks to explore the settler colonial nature of...
The recycling of debates around welfare, violence and history in Settler-Indigenous Australian affai...
This article uses postcolonial theory to analyze the dynamic convergence of two significant internat...
This study examines the implications of the paradoxes evoked by the coexistence of a discourse of d...
This article positions Maori author Alan Duff in relation to the New Right free market economy which...
During the past several decades the dynamics of law and policy reform in Aotearoa/New Zealand have p...
If economic strategies are framed by culturally-bound collectives that draw on particular ideas, val...
This article takes issue with the claim made by Tremewan (2005a) that the New Zealand social scienc...
The central problem investigated here is the conflict between the predominant role that Maori women ...
Indigenous scholars constantly contend with deficit tendencies associated with the value and place o...
This paper compares labour market experiences of indigenous Australians and Maori since 1971 with a ...
Gender and ethnicity are recognised as two of the leading axes of marginality in late twentieth cent...
New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is inter...
This edition of Pacific Journalism Review has a gender theme. Sex is a fundamental divisio...
The author addresses some key issues confronting Māori women in respect of Treaty settlements and of...
This theoretical Kaupapa Māori writing inquiry study seeks to explore the settler colonial nature of...
The recycling of debates around welfare, violence and history in Settler-Indigenous Australian affai...