A history of oppression?: an egalitarian society?
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These resources, from the Treaty and anti-racism movements, relate to events and actions from the 1960s to the present day. They come from a number of collections being held by TRC that are presently being digitised. Your feedback and suggestions are appreciated.
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58bbc10685Rollo Arnold, in this paper, discusses practical ideas that actually shaped the settler countryside and community of New Zealand. He …
58bbc10685"We have officially moved from an education policy of assimilation through the integration policies espoused in the Hunn Report to …
Read MoreThe policies of deception – avoiding accountability to the Maori people
"In the year of the much-hyped Te Maori exhibition, kohanga reo and taha Maori, many pakeha begine to wonder about …
58bbc10685"It is becoming a mark of political soundness among left-wing Pakeha to deny any sense of guilt about our past …
58bbc10685"Barbara Harrison is Assistant Professor in the College of Human and Rural Development of the University of Alaska, at Fairbanks. …
Read MoreBicultural societies: preparing teachers for bicultural classrooms: Alaskan parallels
58bbc10685This article looks at how children learn about their own racial identity and how and what they learn about others. …
Read MoreChildren, Race and racism: How race awareness develops
794b8d60d3"This paper is aimed at setting new Zealand in a wider context in relation to the treatment of its indigenous …
Read MoreIndigenous "Human" Rights in New Zealand from an international perspective
Moana Jackson is a lawyer with Nga Kaiwhakamarama i nga Ture (The Wellington Maori legal service). He discusses the Treaty …
Read MoreAn understanding from which justice comes: Moana Jackson
794b8d60d3Tania gives a speech about Te Tiriti o Waitangi from her own Maori perspective to view education in this country …
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