Whatiwhatihoe

Whatiwhatihoe
Title Whatiwhatihoe PDF eBook
Author David McCan
Publisher Huia Publishers
Pages 404
Release 2001
Genre History
ISBN 9781877266089

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Whatiwhatihoe investigates a complex bundle of issues often referred to simply as a tribal "resource claim" but that really concern factors spanning the total social, political, and economic spectrum. Whatiwhatihoe tracks the origins and history of the Waikato raupatu claim, focusing particularly on the ways the claim has been handled.

Burdon

Burdon
Title Burdon PDF eBook
Author Edmund Bohan
Publisher Hazard Press Ltd
Pages 324
Release 2004
Genre New Zealand
ISBN 9781877270901

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It would be easy to make assumptions about someone like Philip Burdon. The product of a long line of landed gentry going back to the fourteenth century, and of well-heeled pilgrims on Canterbury's First Four Ships, brought up and educated as one of South Canterbury's privileged landowners, a distinguished old boy of Christ's College - and a self-made multimillionaire to boot. Burdon might appear to be the archetypal New Zealand Anglocentric conservative. The truth is very different. This man is also a passionate republican, a businessman with an acute social conscience, a liberal politician who fought relentlessly against the right-wing ideologues of his own National Party, and not only slowed their extremist free-market reforms but convinced his caucus that this philosophy must wear a human face. As Minister of Trade Negotiations, he steered New Zealand through the labyrinth of GATT reforms that made up the Uruguay Round, oversaw a tremendous expansion of New Zealand's trading links into the Middle East, Asia and south and Central America, and championed the cause of regional economic development in the Pacific-Asia area. And, especially through the Asia 2000 Foundation, he has striven for multi-racial harmony and to encourage New Zealand's Asian community to take a full part in this country's public affairs. But this is much more than the biography of a complex and interesting man. Critically acclaimed historian Edmund Bohan has also created a fascinating, lively and important portrait of an extraordinary period in New Zealand's history.

The Quiet Revolution

The Quiet Revolution
Title The Quiet Revolution PDF eBook
Author Colin James
Publisher Bridget Williams Books
Pages 176
Release 2015-12-21
Genre History
ISBN 1877242772

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In The Quiet Revolution, leading political commentator Colin James analyses New Zealand's market-based reforms of the 1980s as they are happening. Writing a first draft of history, he examines how the 'quiet revolution' is seen alternately as a betrayal, a dangerous experiment and a liberation. Combining economic and political analysis, he describes the behind-the-scenes manoeuvring that formed the backdrop to the reforms and the effects of the reform programme itself. He also sees a groundswell of optimism that, he argues, could forge a new and very different society in New Zealand.

When the Farm Gates Opened

When the Farm Gates Opened
Title When the Farm Gates Opened PDF eBook
Author Neal Wallace
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2014
Genre Agriculture
ISBN 9781877578724

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The economic reforms launched by the 1984 David Lange--led Labour government changed New Zealand forever. Agriculture bore the brunt of those changes and Rogernomics, the name by which the era came to be known, became an historical reference point for the primary sector: a defining and pivotal moment when financial subsidies abruptly ended and farming learned to live without government influence, interference or protection. The changes were more sweeping and wide ranging than anything farmers and farming had expected. Some adjusted, some did not. Farmers downed tools in protest, many were forced from their land, families split, there was a spike in suicides and stories spread of farmers hiding machinery from repossession agents. Thirty years on, there has been little documentation of what is folklore and what is fact. This gripping and moving social history, by award-winning agricultural journalist Neal Wallace, relates the story of a rural sector battered and bruised by rapid change. It traces the period building up to the economic changes by talking to political and sector leaders, and the most important contribution comes from interviews with those most affected: farmers

Ruth, Roger and Me

Ruth, Roger and Me
Title Ruth, Roger and Me PDF eBook
Author Andrew Dean
Publisher Bridget Williams Books
Pages 66
Release 2015-05-04
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0908321236

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‘Your words of “discomfort, loss, and disconnection” don’t resonate with me at all.’ Ruth Richardson to Andrew Dean, 16 December 2014. A time of major upheaval now stands between young and old in New Zealand. In Ruth, Roger and Me, Andrew Dean explores the lives of the generation of young people brought up in the shadow of the economic reforms of the 1980s and 1990s, those whom he calls ‘the children of the Mother of All Budgets’. Drawing together memoir, history and interviews, he explores the experiences of ‘discomfort’ and ‘disconnection’ in modern Aotearoa New Zealand.

Children of Rogernomics

Children of Rogernomics
Title Children of Rogernomics PDF eBook
Author Karen Marie Nairn
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2012
Genre Generation Y
ISBN 9781877578182

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In New Zealand, the term "Rogernomics" - a combination of "Roger" and "economics" - was coined to describe the economic policies following Roger Douglas's appointment in 1984 as New Zealand's Minister of Finance in the Fourth Labor Government. His adoption of policies more usually associated with the political right, and their implementation by the Fourth Labor Government, were the subject of lasting controversy. Between 2003 and 2007, the authors of this book investigated what life was like for 93 young people who were about to complete their schooling and enter adulthood in the wake of "Rogernomics." Participants were interviewed in their final year of high school and again 12-18 months later. This book is the result. The lives of these young people are brought into sharp focus, revealing the powerful effects of neoliberal ideas. Their stories show how neoliberalism obscures the structural basis of inequalities and insists that failure to achieve a straightforward transition from sch

The New Zealand Experiment

The New Zealand Experiment
Title The New Zealand Experiment PDF eBook
Author Jane Kelsey
Publisher Bridget Williams Books
Pages 421
Release 2015-12-21
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1877242608

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Jane Kelsey’s was a questioning and challenging voice when she wrote this passionate critique of New Zealand’s economic policies in the 1980s and 90s. The social and economic consequences of a decade of market-based reforms are laid bare in this statistically rich and rhetorically powerful work. Drawing on a wide array of sources, Kelsey’s analysis delves into every aspect of the structural reforms that were to have such vast consequences for New Zealand society. Her analysis of those policies and their consequences gains a fresh – and sobering – perspective in the light of the recent global financial crisis.