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The Ngati Awa Raupatu Report
THE NGATI AWA RAUPATU REPORT THE NGAT I AWA RAUPATU REPORT WA I 46 WAITANGI TRIBUNAL REPORT 1999 The cover design by Cliä Whiting invokes the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi and the consequent interwoven development of Maori and Pakeha history in New Zealand as it continuously unfolds in a pattern not yet completely known A Waitangi Tribunal report isbn 1-86956-252-6 © Waitangi Tribunal 1999 Edited and produced by the Waitangi Tribunal Published by Legislation Direct, Wellington, New Zealand Printed by PrintLink, Wellington, New Zealand Text set in Adobe Minion Multiple Master Captions set in Adobe Cronos Multiple Master LIST OF CONTENTS Letter of transmittal. ix Chapter 1Chapter 1: ScopeScopeScope. 1 1.1 Introduction. 1 1.2 The raupatu claims . 2 1.3 Tribal overlaps . 3 1.4 Summary of main åndings . 4 1.5 Claims not covered in this report . 10 1.6 Hearings. 10 Chapter 2: Introduction to the Tribes. 13 2.1 Ngati Awa and Tuwharetoa . 13 2.2 Origins of Ngati Awa . 14 2.3 Ngati Awa today . 16 2.4 Origins of Tuwharetoa. 19 2.5 Tuwharetoa today . .20 2.6 Ngati Makino . 22 Chapter 3: Background . 23 3.1 Musket wars. 23 3.2 Traders . 24 3.3 Missionaries . 24 3.4 The signing of the Treaty of Waitangi . 25 3.5 Law . 26 3.6 Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi. 28 Chapter 4: The Central North Island Wars . 33 4.1 The relevance of the wars to Ngati Awa. 33 4.2 Conclusion . 39 Chapter 5: The Völkner And Fulloon Slayings . -
JMAD Media Ownership Report
JMAD New Zealand Media Ownership Report 2014 Published: 2014 December 5 Author: Merja Myllylahti This New Zealand Ownership Report 2014 is the fourth published by AUT’s Centre for Journalism, Media and Democracy (JMAD). The report finds that the New Zealand media market has failed to produce new, innovative media outlets, and that all the efforts to establish non-profit outlets have proved unsustainable. The report confirms the general findings of previous reports that New Zealand media space has remained highly commercial. It also confirms the financialisation of media ownership in the form of banks and fund managers. The report also observes that in 2014 convergence between New Zealand mass media and the communications sector generally was in full swing. Companies, such as Spark (former Telecom NZ), started to compete head-to-head with the traditional broadcasters on the online on-demand video and television markets. The American online video subscription service Netflix is entering the NZ market in March 2015. Additionally, the report notes evidence of uncomfortable alliances between citizen media, politicians, PR companies and legacy media. As Nicky Hager’s Dirty Politics book revealed, the National Party and PR practitioners used the Whale Oil blog to drive their own agendas. Also, events related to Maori TV, TVNZ and Scoop raise questions about political interference in media affairs. It is now evident that the boundaries between mainstream media, bloggers, public relations practitioners and politicians are blurring. Key events and trends concerning New Zealand media Financialisation of mass media ownership confirmed Substantial changes in Fairfax, APN and MediaWorks ownership Competition heats up in online television and video markets Turbulence at Maori TV Blurred lines among politicians, bloggers, journalists and PR practitioners The JMAD New Zealand media ownership reports are available here: http://www.aut.ac.nz/study- at-aut/study-areas/communications/media-networks/journalism,-media-and-democracy-research- centre/journalists-and-projects 1 1. -
FY21 GTM Playbook
Partner alignment Partner selection Partner execution Aligning partner capabilities to plays Focus with partners on Co-Sell solutions Orchestrated execution Customer value delivered via pre-defined Quality objective criteria validation Sell-With motion Solution Area Sales Plays Alignment across Microsoft sales team Sales execution: shared and Industry Priority Scenarios engagements/opptys with Co-Sell partners & Investments Incentives Solution Area GTM motion • Modern Work Services Applications • Business Applications Opportunity generation via Play execution: shared • Azure IPS Vertical engagements/opptys through Industry Co-Sell partners Industry Build-With motion • Financial Services Modernization with partners • Manufacturing Recruit • Retail #1 Prioritize recruitment Solution Area priorities & Sales Plays priorities Solution Area • Media & Communications Recruit of practice/solution gaps with • Government partners • Healthcare Identification of gaps across technical capabilities, customer • Education segment or industry #2 Strategically recruit new partners FY21 Solution Area Taxonomy Modern Work & Security Business Applications Azure Sales Play Technical Capability Sales Play Technical Capability Sales Play Technical Capability Sales Play Technical Capability Meetings & Meeting Rooms Activate Digital Sales Windows & SQL Server Migration HPC High Performance Compute Teams Meetings, Live Events Selling Marketing Windows Server to Azure Azure VMWare Calling & Devices & SQL Server Azure VMWare Solutions Calling Enable Always-On Customer -
Aziz Al-Sa'afin
Aziz Al-Sa’afin Height 5'6.5" Chest 38.5" Waist 31.5" Shoe 8 US (kids) Hair Brown Instagram You haven’t started the day right until you’ve had Aziz Al-Sa’afin’s boundless feel-good energy beaming through your TV screen on Three’s The AM Show on weekday mornings. Aziz is the sugar in your coffee, bringing Kiwis good-news stories from not just up and down the country, but all around the world. Almost a decade into his broadcasting career, Aziz has never been one to be pigeon-holed. His CV boasts work across a broad range of media genres, demonstrating just how versatile and adaptable he is. Aziz’s first taste of television presenting was on one of the country’s most successful children’s television show, Sticky TV. Since then, he has worked as a journalist in both radio and television, covering some of the country’s biggest events as a presenter, reporter, and producer. Aziz has reported on such solemn stories as the Seddon earthquakes, MH370, Charlie Hebdo, the Christchurch terror attacks; major sports clashes including the America’s Cup and Rugby World Cup; and conducted interviews with everyone from Justin Bieber, Redfoo and The Wiggles; to Jimmy Spithill, Richie McCaw and our last three Prime Ministers. This all occurred during his time on Three’s flagship news bulletins - The Paul Henry Show; The Project and Firstline; as well as during his stints abroad as a correspondent for the Today Show, Sunrise, the BBC and CNN. Known for his warm, friendly and energetic nature, Aziz is a proud LGBT ambassador and is a voice and activist for the community. -
Infectious Disease Handbook
INFECTIOUS DISEASE HANDBOOK Articles and Contributions By: Steve Dale • Dr. Justine Lee • Dr. Garret Pachtinger • Dr. Michelle Evason Dr. Jarod Hanson • Dr. Jason Stull • Dr. Kathryn Primm • Dr. Ronald Schultz Dr. Melissa Bourgeois • Julie Legred • Dr. Nyssa Reine-Salz • Dr. Natalie L. Marks Michael Mayer • Dr. Brenda Dines • Dr. Madeleine Stahl • Dr. Richard Hawkes HEROES FOR HEALTHY PETS™ INFECTIOUS DISEASE HANDBOOK Edited by Dr. Madeleine Stahl Table of Contents Introduction: Steve Dale, CABC ...................................... 2 Part one: Infectious Diseases of Dogs 3 Canine Parvovirus Dr. Justine Lee ........................................... 4 Canine Distemper Dr. Justine Lee ........................................... 6 Canine Hepatits Dr. Garret Pachtinger................................. 8 Rabies Dr. Garret Pachtinger................................. 10 Leptospirosis Dr. Michelle Evason and Dr. Jason Stull .... 12 Canine Influenza Dr. Jarod Hanson ....................................... 15 Canine Infectious Cough Dr. Michelle Evason and Dr. Jason Stull .... 18 Part two: Prevention of Infectious Disease 21 Vaccines Made Easy Dr. Kathryn Primm ..................................... 22 Strategic Vaccination Recommendation for Social Dogs Dr. Ronald Schultz ...................................... 24 Cleaning and Disinfection Guidelines Dr. Melissa Bourgeois ................................ 25 The Veterinary Technician’s Role in Managing Infectious Disease Outbreaks Julie Legred ............................................... 28 -
1 Biologic Healthcare, LLC Patient Guide When You Pick Out
Biologic Healthcare, LLC Patient Guide When you pick out something by itself, you find it hitched to everything else in the universe. ~John Muir MISSION STATEMENT Biologic Healthcare, LLC (BH) offers primary and specialty healthcare for individuals and families, focusing on Lifestyle, Functional and Preventive Medicine. BH promotes healing of acute, chronic and degenerative conditions using an Integrative model of effective, least intrusive, evidence-based approaches. Patients are encouraged to make informed choices leading to optimal health. WELCOME TO BIOLOGIC We welcome you as a new patient at Biologic Healthcare and are pleased to work in partnership with you toward your well-being. BH looks forward to encouraging a healthy lifestyle that is balanced and informed in an environment that is supportive and optimistic. Our office staff is available to help with questions and to ensure time with BH is as productive and stress-free as possible. Whether you are seeking general, individual or family services or have a specific health concern, BH is committed to providing sensible and realistic options. Our Focus on Lifestyle, Functional and Preventive Medicine takes into account how powerful simple changes can be – and how they begin a domino effect for improvement. We do not simply treat symptoms, we ask the question “why” they have developed and the answer is often interconnected with other issues. Our practitioners do not give up on difficult problems and we have teamwork and support systems to take individual challenges and solutions into consideration. You are not just a file number at BH – we are going to understand how unique you are by your role in the community, workplace and home. -
Can Web Series Destabilise Traditional Notions of Script Development?
Australian Screen Production Education & Research Association “It’s the Wild West out there”: Can web series destabilise traditional notions of script development? Annual Conference Refereed Paper ASPERA Annual Conference 2015: “What’s This Space? Screen Practice, Audiences and Education for the Future Decade” Stayci Taylor RMIT University [email protected] Abstract This paper proposes that the concept of ‘script development’—already an ambiguous and arguably unexamined term—is further complicated by the rise of the ‘webisode’, drawing from existing discourse and scholarship on web series, much of which focuses upon (and/or problematises) an assumed amateur/professional binary that would cast online media as ‘other’. But, as this paper argues, while this distinction is being debated, a space opens up within which web series creators are making their own rules. In other words, ‘the Wild West’ landscape of web series, where ‘both the newbie and the veteran can create their own shows without permission from, or the approval of, traditional electronic media networks and studios which historically served as gatekeepers’ (LA Web Fest Founder Michael Ajakwe, quoted in Liang 2013), might be facilitating new practices of script development which, given the crossover success of many web series creatives, might be infiltrating those of the mainstream. Acknowledging the multiple meanings attached to the notion of ‘web series’, this paper wonders how previous ideas of script development are challenged when ‘Audiences can now watch what they want, when they want, which, in turn, means that [television] shows no longer have to be packaged in 30- or 60-minute instalments’ (Brown 2011). -
ED'218 653 CS 207 076 AUTHOR Graves, Donald H. a Casestudy Observing the Development of Primary Children's Composing, Spelling
'DOCUMENT RESUME ED'218 653 CS 207 076 AUTHOR Graves, Donald H. TITLE' A CaseStudy Observing the Development of Primary Children's Composing, Spelling, and Motor Behaviors during the Writing Process. Final Report, September 1, 1978-August 31, 1981. INSTITUTION New Hampshire Univ.-, Durham. Dept. of Education. SPONS AGENCY National Inst. of Education '(ED), Washington, DC. tb PUB DATE [82] ,GRANT NiE-G-78-0174 NOTE 501p.; Articles ay be marginally legible-4 EDRS PRICE MF02/PC2rPlut Po tags. DESCRIPTORS Case Studies; Chi d Language; *Clastroom Observation Techniques; Cla room Research; Elementary Education; Elementary Scho 1 Students; Handwriting; Punctuation; Spelling; *Studt Behavior; *Teacher Behavior; I Teaching. Methods, Writing Instruction; *Writing Processes; *Writing Research ABSTRACT 1 \ Sixteen children in five different classrooms in the same, small, \ural-:suburbah schoolin New Hampshire were observed for 2 years to do umeat what primary children did when they wrote.Eight of the childr n were observed from age 6 through 7, andeight from 8 through 9. Thr e researchers were on-site-in.classrooms 4 days outof 5 for the 2-year project. Data were gathered through child and teacher interviews, direct observation of children throughspecific protocols,'and ideo recordings of children while composing, _ conversing with other children, and in conference, as well as through . all of the children's iritten products. Data from observationsof child behavior duiing the writing process together with data from ,observations of teacher practices -
CHAPTER TWO Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki
Te Kooti’s slow-cooking earth oven prophecy: A Patuheuheu account and a new transformative leadership theory Byron Rangiwai PhD ii Dedication This book is dedicated to my late maternal grandparents Rēpora Marion Brown and Edward Tapuirikawa Brown Arohanui tino nui iii Table of contents DEDICATION ..................................................................................................................... iii CHAPTER ONE: Introduction ............................................................................................ 1 CHAPTER TWO: Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki .......................................................... 18 CHAPTER THREE: The Significance of Land and Land Loss ..................................... 53 CHAPTER FOUR: The emergence of Te Umutaoroa and a new transformative leadership theory ................................................................................................. 74 CHAPTER FIVE: Conclusion: Reflections on the Book ................................................. 83 BIBLIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................ 86 Abbreviations AJHR: Appendices to the Journals of the House of Representatives MS: Manuscript MSS: Manuscripts iv CHAPTER ONE Introduction Ko Hikurangi te maunga Hikurangi is the mountain Ko Rangitaiki te awa Rangitaiki is the river Ko Koura te tangata Koura is the ancestor Ko Te Patuheuheu te hapū Te Patuheuheu is the clan Personal introduction The French philosopher Michel Foucault stated: “I don't -
MANA WAHINE READER a COLLECTION of WRITINGS 1987-1998 2 VOLUME I Mana Wahine Reader a Collection of Writings 1987-1998 Volume I
MANA WAHINE READER A COLLECTION OF WRITINGS 1987-1998 2 VOLUME I Mana Wahine Reader A Collection of Writings 1987-1998 Volume I I First Published 2019 by Te Kotahi Research Institute Hamilton, Aotearoa/ New Zealand ISBN: 978-0-9941217-6-9 Education Research Monograph 3 © Te Kotahi Research Institute, 2019 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without prior written permission of the publisher. Design Te Kotahi Research Institute Cover illustration by Robyn Kahukiwa Print Waikato Print – Gravitas Media The Mana Wahine Publication was supported by: Disclaimer: The editors and publisher gratefully acknowledge the permission granted to reproduce the material within this reader. Every attempt has been made to ensure that the information in this book is correct and that articles are as provided in their original publications. To check any details please refer to the original publication. II Mana Wahine Reader | A Collection of Writings 1987-1998, Volume I Mana Wahine Reader A Collection of Writings 1987-1998 Volume I Edited by: Leonie Pihama, Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Naomi Simmonds, Joeliee Seed-Pihama and Kirsten Gabel III Table of contents Poem Don’t Mess with the Māori Woman - Linda Tuhiwai Smith 01 Article 01 To Us the Dreamers are Important - Rangimarie Mihomiho Rose Pere 04 Article 02 He Aha Te Mea Nui? - Waerete Norman 13 Article 03 He Whiriwhiri Wahine: Framing Women’s Studies for Aotearoa Ngahuia Te Awekotuku 19 Article 04 Kia Mau, Kia Manawanui -
New Zealand Media Ownership 2018
NEW ZEALAND MEDIA OWNERSHIP 2020 AUT research centre for Journalism, Media and Democracy (JMAD) Edited by Merja Myllylahti and Wayne Hope December 7, 2020 ABOUT THIS REPORT This report is part of JMAD’s ongoing series of reports on New Zealand media ownership. Since 2011, the AUT research centre for Journalism, Media and Democracy (JMAD) has published reports that document and analyse developments within New Zealand media. These incorporate media ownership, market structures and key events during each year. The reports are freely available and accessible to anyone via the JMAD research centre: https://www.aut.ac.nz/study/study-options/communication- studies/research/journalism,-media-and-democracy-research-centre 2020 report team To celebrate the JMAD research centre’s 10th anniversary, this 10th New Zealand media ownership report is co-written by AUT lecturers who are experts in their fields. The report is co-edited by the JMAD Co-Directors Dr Merja Myllylahti and Professor Wayne Hope. Contributors Dr Sarah Baker Dr Peter Hoar Professor Wayne Hope Dr Rufus McEwan Dr Atakohu Middleton Dr Merja Myllylahti Dr Greg Treadwell This report is covered by the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 International. When reproducing any part of this report – including tables and graphs – full attribution must be given to the report author(s). 1 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF JOURNALISM, MEDIA AND DEMOCRACY RESEARCH CENTRE The AUT research centre for Journalism, Media and Democracy (JMAD) was established in 2010 by (then) Associate Professors Wayne Hope and Martin Hirst to promote research into the media and communication industries and to increase knowledge about news and professional practices in journalism. -
2015 LOCAL CONTENT New Zealand Television
2015 LOCAL CONTENT New Zealand Television CONTENTS 2015 AT A GLANCE – FREE-TO-AIR TELEVISION EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 2015 3 2015 Key Trends 3 PART 1. LOCAL CONTENT BY CHANNEL 6 PART 2. PRIME TIME LOCAL CONTENT 12 PART 3. FIRST RUN LOCAL CONTENT 16 PART 4. REPEATED LOCAL CONTENT 21 PART 5. TRENDS BY GENRE 22 APPENDIX 1: Notes on methodology 32 APPENDIX 2: First run local content by genre and channel since 2000 33 APPENDIX 3: 2015 Totals 34 APPENDIX 4: NZ On Air funded programmes 2015 35 APPENDIX 5: List of NZ On Air funded programmes broadcast in 2015 (18-hour day) 37 APPENDIX 6: List of all local content broadcast in 2015 (18-hour day) 40 PURPOSE: Each year since 1989 NZ On Air has measured the amount of local content broadcast on New Zealand’s main free-to-air television channels. This report is an important way NZ On Air monitors the amount of local programming available freely to New Zealanders. While the numbers fluctuate by year, this data is collated to provide a way to assess trends over time. 2015 AT A GLANCE – FREE-TO-AIR TELEVISION Local content increased First run programming é decreased by 278 hours, 2.4% accounting for from 2014, an additional 298 hours caused mainly by 17% extended Māori of the broadcast schedule Television transmission (6am – midnight) and an increase (18% in 2014) in General Factual 12,836 programming hours of local content screened on New Zealand’s six major 36% free-to-air TV channels (6am – midnight, of prime time hours up from 12,538 hours (6pm-10pm) were local content in 2014, see fig.3) (the same as 2014) screened the most first run local content and News, Current Affairs 2015 and Sport comprise played the most local 43% content in prime time of total local hours.