Bringing together Niue scholars, creatives and thinkers from various disciplines and fields, this article is the culmination of two conference roundtables, a history panel, and multiple ongoing discussions about critically engaging with and contributing to Niue knowledge in academia. From different standpoints we each explore the vastness of Niue history through lenses that centre, privilege and uphold aga fakaNiue (Niue lifestyle, ways, culture) through cultural values and principles, tāoga (that which is treasured or prized), metaphor and approaches. Engaging in these spaces as tau tagata Niue (Niue people) is inevitably marked by Niue’s connections to Aotearoa and the wider Pacific. While our work may challenge dominant narratives by non...
As co-editors in this special issue of the Waikato Journal of Education (WJE), we share our talanoa ...
The Aotearoa New Zealand’s Histories curriculum will be compulsory in 2023; what and how New Zealand...
Prior to the arrival of Pākehā to Aotearoa/New Zealand, the Māori language was exclusively oral. How...
Bringing together Niue scholars, creatives and thinkers from various disciplines and fields, this ar...
Remembering the past is not as straight forward as it might appear. The histories that we choose to ...
TAGATA NIUE Tagata Niue are not a homogeneous group. Rather there are two main groupings – tagata N...
The studies of oral history and oral tradition each have their own distinctive bodies of literature ...
This article explores the contribution that narrative can make to more mainstream historiography. It...
From various parts of Te Moana Nui a Kiwa, we have come together as Indigenous scholars to weave sto...
This special issue of Public History Review has been edited by Fiona McKergow, Geoff Watson, David L...
IT SHOULD COME AS NO SURPRISE TO FIND that New Zealand history is Māori history. In 1987 when Tipene...
I am privileged to have been given the opportunity to document the hand written writings in Māori of...
This special issue of Public History Review has been edited by Fiona McKergow, Geoff Watson, David L...
This research examines the status of Te Atiawa historical knowledge in Port Nicholson Block secondar...
New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is inter...
As co-editors in this special issue of the Waikato Journal of Education (WJE), we share our talanoa ...
The Aotearoa New Zealand’s Histories curriculum will be compulsory in 2023; what and how New Zealand...
Prior to the arrival of Pākehā to Aotearoa/New Zealand, the Māori language was exclusively oral. How...
Bringing together Niue scholars, creatives and thinkers from various disciplines and fields, this ar...
Remembering the past is not as straight forward as it might appear. The histories that we choose to ...
TAGATA NIUE Tagata Niue are not a homogeneous group. Rather there are two main groupings – tagata N...
The studies of oral history and oral tradition each have their own distinctive bodies of literature ...
This article explores the contribution that narrative can make to more mainstream historiography. It...
From various parts of Te Moana Nui a Kiwa, we have come together as Indigenous scholars to weave sto...
This special issue of Public History Review has been edited by Fiona McKergow, Geoff Watson, David L...
IT SHOULD COME AS NO SURPRISE TO FIND that New Zealand history is Māori history. In 1987 when Tipene...
I am privileged to have been given the opportunity to document the hand written writings in Māori of...
This special issue of Public History Review has been edited by Fiona McKergow, Geoff Watson, David L...
This research examines the status of Te Atiawa historical knowledge in Port Nicholson Block secondar...
New Zealand is a country of four million people some 2000 kilometres east of Australia. It is inter...
As co-editors in this special issue of the Waikato Journal of Education (WJE), we share our talanoa ...
The Aotearoa New Zealand’s Histories curriculum will be compulsory in 2023; what and how New Zealand...
Prior to the arrival of Pākehā to Aotearoa/New Zealand, the Māori language was exclusively oral. How...