British settlers and the land Author InformationResource primary author: Arnold, RolloResource secondary author: Resource tertiary author : Source title: Source author/editor 1: not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archive Project WaitangiPublisher: Rollo ArnoldPhysical description: 14 pages, 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Pages 27 to 40; includes referencesAll publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationContent Description: Rollo Arnold, in this paper, discusses practical ideas that actually shaped the settler countryside and community of New Zealand. He discusses British Settlers leaving England and settling into all regions of New Zealand. TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Speech Sector: Community General Related Topics: Colonisation Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori Other ethnic Pākehā Type of content: History Resources : Land
The policies of deception - avoiding accountability to the Maori people Author InformationResource primary author: Thorsen, Keith Source title: PPTA Journal, May 1987not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archive Project Waitangi and Education 2: Programme on Racism Box 4Publisher: PPTA JournalPlace of publication: AucklandDate of Publication: May 1987Physical description: 4 pages, illustrations, 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Pages 24 to 27All publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationTable of Contents: The Pakeha presence -- Appropriating taha Maori -- Cultual deficit -- Change -- Alternative schooling -- Our esponse -- Notes. Content Description: "We have officially moved from an education policy of assimilation through the integration policies espoused in the Hunn Report to a position of putting a positive value on cultural diversity. Yet there are persistent Maori voices telling us nothing has changed. They say we have been practicing policies of deception that disguise the underlying reality of Pakeha domination and allow it to continue. The connection between society and schooling needs analysis but there is insufficient space here. This article concentrates on how the power imbalance is evidence in the secondary education system and discusses changes to that system." TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Magazine article Sector: Community Education - secondary Education - tertiary Cultural Related Topics: Racism General Related Topics: Equity/justice/fairness Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori Pākehā Type of content: Injustice Policy Resources : Culture
Te Pakeha: the search for white identity Author InformationResource primary author: Wall, Carroll not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archive Project Waitangi and T1 - Treaty and Local GovernmentPublisher: MetroPlace of publication: AucklandPhysical description: 9 pages, illustrations, 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Illustration by Stephen StockleyAll publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationContent Description: "In the year of the much-hyped Te Maori exhibition, kohanga reo and taha Maori, many pakeha begine to wonder about their own cultural roots. Is there any such thing as Pakeha culture, or is what passes for it simply a bad imitation of European culture and bastardisation of California dreaming? Is it still ok to be whiteman?" TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attachedFurther information is required: Yes Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Magazine article Sector: Community Education - tertiary Cultural Related Topics: Bi-cultural Concept of culture Multi-cultural Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori Type of content: History Resources : Culture
Politcally soyund: Pakeha backlash Author InformationResource primary author: Steven, Rob not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPhysical description: 6 pages, illustrations, 30cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Pages 87 to 92mAll publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationContent Description: "It is becoming a mark of political soundness among left-wing Pakeha to deny any sense of guilt about our past or present roles in the colonisation of Aotearoa. The current backlash against Maoridoms struggle for a genuine partnership in accordance with the |Treaty of Waitangi is thus not confined to the extreme right or event the liberal middle. It reaches deep into the radical left, which after making some belated concessions to Maori nationalism after the struggles against the 1981 Springbok Tour, has now firmly settled back into its old smugness." TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Magazine article Sector: Community Education - tertiary Cultural Related Topics: Racism Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori
Children, Race and racism: How race awareness develops Author InformationResource primary author: Derman-SparksResource secondary author: Tanaka, Carol; Sparks, Bill Source title: Bulletin Vol 11, No. 3 & 4not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPublisher: Bulletin Date of Publication: 1980Physical description: 13 pages, illustrations, 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: pages 3 to 15maAll publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationContent Description: This article looks at how children learn about their own racial identity and how and what they learn about others. The article notes, inaccurate, stereotypic and caricatured images and information about racial/cultural groups are particularly harmful, at the stage of development when children are still forming clear concepts of themselves and others. TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Māori Pākehā Publication format: Magazine article Sector: Community Education - tertiary Health Cultural Related Topics: Racism Historical Period: 20th
Maori illness and healing : Seminar - Mental health - a case for reform Author InformationResource primary author: Marsden, M.Resource secondary author: Resource tertiary author : Source title: Source author/editor 1: not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPublisher: M MarsdenDate of Publication: 1986Physical description: 21 pages, 22 x 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Legal Research foundation : 5/9/1986All publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationTable of Contents: Introduction -- Conflict model -- 1. Indigenous vs metropolitan culture -- Indigenous culture -- Metropoitan culture -- Basic orientation of metropole -- To sum up -- Western view of ultimate reality -- The scientific method -- Humanistic philosophies -- The new physicists -- Worlds -- Some conclusions -- Maori view -- the World of symbol -- Maori approach to healing -- Domination: methods, strategies, assumptions -- Integration/assimilationist policies -- Cross cultural education -- The law -- Police processes and procedures -- Application -- conclusion. Content Description: TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Māori Publication format: Book/report Sector: Community Education - tertiary Health Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori Resources : Culture
Learning to live with the Waitangi Tribunal: the facts without fear Author InformationResource primary author: Booth, atResource secondary author: Resource tertiary author : Source title: North & SouthSource author/editor 1: not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPublisher: North & SouthPlace of publication: AucklandPhysical description: 12 pages, illustrations, 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Pages 77 to 87All publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationTable of Contents: The Waitangi Tribunal - its origins and destination -- Evidence about the evidence -- The members -- The controversies -- The powers -- The method -- Voices from history -- The Decisions -- March 1983 -- November 1984 -- July 1985 -- April 1986 -- November 1987 -- Two important viewpoints to consider -- The figures tell a story. Content Description: "People either talk about justice or ripoffs. There seems to be no middle way over the Waitangi Tribunal. Yet, if you are going to understand living in New Zealand into the 21st century it's something you've got to come to terms with. You've got to understand what impact its work will have on the pattern of race relations, social understanding, your right of access to sea and hill and river, and on the national economy in the next two decades. Ths short answer is that it will have plenty - whether you like it or not." TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Magazine article Sector: Community Education - Treaty Cultural Related Topics: Bi-cultural General Related Topics: Colonisation Equity/justice/fairness First Peoples' rights Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori Type of content: Treaty generally
Land since the Treaty: The nibble, the bite, the swallow Author InformationResource primary author: Sinclair, DouglasResource secondary author: Resource tertiary author : Source title: Te Ao Hurihuri: the world moves onSource author/editor 1: not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPlace of publication: WellingtonDate of Publication: 1977Physical description: 16 pages, 22 x 30 cm.bPublication Miscellaneous Notes: Pages 141-171All publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: t Content InformationTable of Contents: Trouble in the Hutt -- Taranaki: the beginning of the end -- The land court blow -- Piracy by the Crown -- The Ngai Tahu claim -- Summary of Trust Boards administering monetary settlemetns of major tribal land and lake claims settled in the 1940s -- Maori land today -- The 1967 Maori Affairs Amendment Act -- Conclusion. Content Description: TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Book chapter Sector: Community Resources : Land
Land: Maori view and European response Author InformationResource primary author: Sinclair, Douglas Source title: Te Ao Hurihuri: the world moves onnot attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPlace of publication: WellingtonDate of Publication: 1977Physical description: 12 pages, 22 x 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: Pages 114 to 139All publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationTable of Contents: Customary Title or papa Tipu -- Right of Discovery or whenua kite hou -- Right of ocupation or Ahi Ka -- Right of Conquest or Take Raupatu -- Right of gift or Take Tuku -- Right of Deathbed deposition or Take Ohaki -- Law of Compensation for misbehaviour or Muru -- Customary land or whenua tipu -- The benefits of customary title -- The introduction of Crown Title -- Background to the Treaty of Waitangi -- new theories -- Hobson's instructions -- Hobson Lands and preapres the treaty -- The Treaty is drafted and translated -- First article of the Treaty -- Second Article -- Third Article -- Results. TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesnot attached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Book chapter Sector: Community Historical Period: 20th Informal Groups: Māori Migrant Pākehā Type of content: History Resources : Land
The land wars of 86: two histories Author InformationResource primary author: Callan, Lousie"Resource secondary author: Resource tertiary author : Source title: Source author/editor 1: not attachedPublication InformationCatalogue Number: APW-1 - Archives Project WaitangiPublisher: Auckland MetroPlace of publication: AucklandDate of Publication: April 1986Physical description: 6 pages, pages numbered 23,24,28,30,32,34; illustrations, 30 cm.Publication Miscellaneous Notes: pages 23 to 34All publication information has been entered: YesWhere can I find this?: Treaty Resource Centre Content InformationTable of Contents: The White tribe -- the research farm -- The first history -- The histories merge -- Questions but no answers -- A sense of belonging. Content Description: "Dick and John Prangley are the third generation of Pakeha to work their Mangere land. Now Moari people want it back." This article looks at the Treaty of Waitangi, the Waitangi Tribunal recommendations on claims relating to the practical application of the Treaty and to determine whether certain matters are inconsistent with the principles of the Treaty and takes a look at two histories of people on the land. TRC has a copy: YesContent is complete: Yesattached Publication status: Okay to copy Author Ethnicity: Pākehā Publication format: Magazine article Sector: Community Education - Treaty Historical Period: 20th Type of content: Treaty generally Resources : Land