New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is internationally renowned for a number of things that reflect national mythology, such as landscape, flora and fauna, sporting prowess and - especially important for today's paper - race relations. The relations between Maori, the first arrivals a thousand years ago, and pakeha (non-Maori, mostly of British origin), has been lauded as being based on reciprocal tolerance, enlightened policies and mutual agreements - 'the best race relations in the world'. National myths, of course, seldom stand up fully to reality. Sizeable parts of the landscape have been stripped of forest, many indigenous species are under threat of extinction, the All Blacks ...
Conflict or a reconciliation of it is a common theme in discussions on indigenous peoples’ heritage....
Veracini suggests that the coloniser does not yet know ‘how settler decolonisation should appear’. I...
This chapter examines the changing patterns of inter-ethnic relationships among Maori and Pakeha in ...
New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is inter...
New Zealand has been undertaking a process of negotiating and settling the historical Treaty of Wait...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...
The meaning of citizenship for many Indigenous peoples has historically entailed assimilation into t...
The sense of crisis that marks our times may be seen as a crisis for dominant groups whose once-secu...
Settler colonies arose out of a form of European colonialism where a white collectivity was installe...
When the British first arrived in New Zealand, the lives of the Māori changed forever. Though the Br...
My colleague has outlined some of the major issues facing New Zealand and its indigenous Polynesians...
The sense of crisis that marks our times may be seen as a crisis for dominant groups whose once-secu...
The Treaty of Waitangi was signed in 1840 between the British Crown and Māori, the indigenous people...
The 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, signed by representatives of the British Crown and Maori Tribes, create...
Reconciliation, Representation, and Indigeneity begins with the claim that it ‘offers an up-to-date ...
Conflict or a reconciliation of it is a common theme in discussions on indigenous peoples’ heritage....
Veracini suggests that the coloniser does not yet know ‘how settler decolonisation should appear’. I...
This chapter examines the changing patterns of inter-ethnic relationships among Maori and Pakeha in ...
New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is inter...
New Zealand has been undertaking a process of negotiating and settling the historical Treaty of Wait...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...
The meaning of citizenship for many Indigenous peoples has historically entailed assimilation into t...
The sense of crisis that marks our times may be seen as a crisis for dominant groups whose once-secu...
Settler colonies arose out of a form of European colonialism where a white collectivity was installe...
When the British first arrived in New Zealand, the lives of the Māori changed forever. Though the Br...
My colleague has outlined some of the major issues facing New Zealand and its indigenous Polynesians...
The sense of crisis that marks our times may be seen as a crisis for dominant groups whose once-secu...
The Treaty of Waitangi was signed in 1840 between the British Crown and Māori, the indigenous people...
The 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, signed by representatives of the British Crown and Maori Tribes, create...
Reconciliation, Representation, and Indigeneity begins with the claim that it ‘offers an up-to-date ...
Conflict or a reconciliation of it is a common theme in discussions on indigenous peoples’ heritage....
Veracini suggests that the coloniser does not yet know ‘how settler decolonisation should appear’. I...
This chapter examines the changing patterns of inter-ethnic relationships among Maori and Pakeha in ...