Draft Programme

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Draft Programme Conference Programme November 11th: Day One 9.00am Welcome Wharenui LT 1 9.30am Keynote: Constitutional Transformation Wharenui Featuring: Professor Margaret Mutu and Dr Veronica Tawhai LT 1 Constitutional transformation is one of the biggest political ideas Aotearoa must grapple with. But what does it mean? How does it happen? Sparking off our conference, Tayla Cook and Safari Hynes will sit down for a kaputī with Professor Margaret Mutu and Dr Veronica Tawhai, members of Matike Mai Aotearoa, the Independent Working Group on Constitutional Transformation. This intergenerational kōrero will set the scene for the rest of the week, and go straight to the heart of Aotearoa’s biggest questions around Te Tiriti o Waitangi, tino rangatiratanga, mana motuhake and political change. 10.30am Morning Tea 11.00am Papers: “Questioning Place and Privilege” Wharenui Missing from our Refugee Debate: the Right to Cross Borders LT 1 Presented by: Umesh Perinpanayagam Over the last few years activists have focused on (increasing) the New Zealand government’s refugee quota intake — a program which sees the government chose a fixed number of refugees from overseas to be resettled here. However, challenging the government’s policies to stop potential refugees reaching New Zealand borders, where they can claim asylum, has been missing from this debate. These policies have coincided with a marked decline in people claiming asylum here despite an unprecedented number of people displaced by wars and persecution globally — to which Western states have been major contributors. This paper outlines New Zealand government policies based on public sources and official information requests and touches upon their legal and moral implications. It will also discuss the case of the Andika — a boat which attempted to reach these shores in 2015 but was blocked — and its significance for refugee activists. Using My White Privilege - an Irish Woman in Aotearoa Presented by: Aoife Healy The esteemed Moana Jackson once spoke about the Irish being a “darker shade of pale” referring to the past oppression of the Irish people. In recent history, Ireland has wielded significant soft power globally and this has resulted in a total shift in attitudes towards the Irish culture. Unfortunately, many Irish people have transitioned out of our own colonial past and are not committed to ensuring other oppressed peoples have access to the same freedoms we now have. This forgetting of our ancestor’s fights is not unique to Irish people. The Oppression Olympics is particularly prevalent in groups who have garnered some level of social mobility - of culture, of gender, of financial circumstance. This paper will examine the nuances and complexities of these relationships and how understanding our own histories can remind us of where who we are responsible to and how we use our privilege in Aotearoa today. An Aotearoa/NZ histories Curriculum for Educators at All Levels Presented by: Tamsin Hanly Research shows that many NZers have been raised on the “grand colonial standard story” of NZ history. Generations across all ethnicities and social economic status from Prime Ministers, Ministers of Education, educators, to the public resulting in ignorance of more accurate histories, lack of knowledge about things Māori and Pākehā Culture, Te Tiriti, colonization and it’s impacts and Māori survival. I have designed a critique of and an alternative to the “grand colonial standard story” in the form of an Aotearoa/NZ curriculum for educators of all levels in 6 books. The content goes from the Māori origin narrative to the 2000s unpacking a beginners’ guide to Māori worldviews, British worldviews, what happened when they met, the Declaration, two Tiriti/Treaty texts, colonization, Pākehā Culture and Māori survival. Educators read and design their own plans in ninety schools currently. NZ history is compulsory by 2022, I have been trying to get a appointment with Ministry for 6 years, they do not know about my curriculum. Awa Making Space for Feelings MZ05 Presented by: Lenka Rochford Injustice makes us feel stuff and engaging in the struggle against injustice makes us feel stuff. We aren’t always entirely aware of what emotions are driving us at different times. Being more concious of our emotional motivations and reactions to the struggles we engage in can help us be more kind to ourselves and each other and can help us process them as we go along and avoid burn out. This workshop will encourage participants to think about their emotional responses to the world around us. What do we care about? why do we care? and what does it feel like to care? We won’t be doing group therapy or asking you to feel all the feelings. Lenka is a pakeha, cis woman, mum, activist and therapist. My ideas come from my life experience and psychotherapy theories of the mind. Kōhanga Reo Indigenous Solidarity, Community & Connection MZ06 Presented by: Anevili TS A panel and forum for Indigenous persons to discuss how we, as Indigenous and First Peoples of this region, maintain our cultures and communities in the face of colonisation, capitalism, imperialism and climate change. How does the remembrance of our ancestral relationships ground our movements and our solidarity with each other, near and far? How do we learn from each other without co-option/appropriation, how do we reforge our ancestral ties? Ātea Peace to Action: How Can Research Support Practical Action for Social MZ03 Change? Presented by: Dr Monica Carrer and Dr Sylvia Frain How can academic researchers support activists, individuals, and families to carry out everyday action for resistance, peace, and social change? In this session, we will stimulate a conversation focused around this question and welcome diverse perspectives on how to connect to make an impact. We will share the journeys that brought us to co-found The Everyday Peace Initiative (EPI) to bridge academic research and everyday peace action. Our goal is to explore practical ways for people to regain their agency while “unlearning” colonial, political, structural forms of violence. We are guided by answering these questions through practice: Who is our research for? How do we incorporate and value people’s knowledges? How do we, as researchers, engage with people and produce outcomes that benefit them? Whare Kai Weaving Intentions for the Kāwanatanga Sphere MZ02 Presented by: Dr Arama Rata (Ngāti Maniapoto, Taranaki, Ngāruahine) and Jess Mio (tauiwi pākehā) Matike Mai Aotearoa envisages a constitution that honours Te Tiriti o Waitangi and supports the free flourishing of all peoples in Aotearoa. Achieving this vision requires complete transformation of the kāwanatanga sphere: from its current form as the Crown in Parliament wielding stolen power, to a new system of tauiwi (non-Māori) making collective decisions in accordance with tikanga. This session asks us to each imagine our ideal kāwanatanga sphere. What values would be at its heart? How would tauiwi make appropriate decisions for ourselves here on whenua Māori? What would life be like in that transformed reality? All are welcome to contribute. 12.00pm Wharenui Pākehātanga LT 1 Presented by: Emily Beausoleil and members of Tauiwi mō Matike Mai Pākehātanga is the ongoing work within pākehā communities of developing a collective sense of identity and purpose. This session responds to the call from various corners for ‘pākehātanga’, in the name of and as necessary precursor and support for decolonisation and constitutional transformation. Over this hour, members of Tauiwi mō Matike Mai who have been developing a theory of change for tauiwi pākehā – as well as other pākehā who have been working in this space of pākehātanga in various ways - will share something of their learning and hold a space where the awkward, fraught, fumbling work of pākehātanga can be furthered in some way, by explicitly asking together what it would require, what actions we might or must take, and how pākehā, once gathered or, in part, in the very act of gathering ourselves, might contribute to constitutional transformation and decolonisation. Awa What Place Does Compassion Have in Achieving Social Change? MZ05 Presented by: Gaayathri Nair This session is a facilitated discussion, in it I put forward to the group the question “what place does compassion have in achieving social change?” and bring some examples of what compassion can look like. Some thoughts you might like to consider before attending are: Can compassion help us bridge the divide between ourselves and those who hold different values? How does defensiveness impede social change? How do you hold space and have grace for people while they change? Our panellists will reflect on their experiences in growing of renters’ movements in the last 5 years before facilitating a discussion with the audience on where next. Kōhanga Reo From One Tired Indigenous Māmā MZ06 Presented by: Tessa Williams In Person I constantly see the same people fighting for a better future for the collective, from whānau kitchens through to the frontlines of land occupations. The same people, over and over, giving all they can give without being asked. They do it not for themselves but for everyone else. Often these people are indigenous, often women, often māmā. They don’t expect recognition, but they deserve it. An exhibition of recent works by Tessa Williams created to give voice to the intertwined experiences of indigenous mothers and indigenous knowledge from Atua to present day. It demonstrates the value of our ways of knowing, doing, and moving, as indigenous people. The double session will include a short talk to kaupapa and each piece in Tessa’s series. Then, an intermission before creating space and time for the audience who attend to stop and appreciate themselves for all that they are able to do for others. Aroha mai aroha atu. Ātea Papers: “In Defence of Whenua” MZ03 The Common Denominator Presented by: Chris Huriwai Dairy milk consumption and production, its contribution to: climate change, water/natural resource scarcity, embedded colonial racism, inequality of outcomes for Māori and unjustified animal cruelty.
Recommended publications
  • The Unreal Estate Guide to Detroit
    The Unreal Estate Guide to Detroit Digitalculturebooks, an imprint of the University of Michigan Press, is dedicated to publishing work in new media studies and the emerging field of digital humanities. The Unreal Estate Guide to Detroit Andrew Herscher The University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor Copyright © by Andrew Herscher 2012 Some rights reserved This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial- No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA. Published in the United States of America by The University of Michigan Press Manufactured in the United States of America c Printed on acid-free paper 2015 2014 2013 2012 4 3 2 1 A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978-0-472-03521-2 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN 978-0-472-02917-4 (e-book) “Precisely because physical devastation on such a huge scale boggles the mind, it also frees the imagination … to perceive reality anew; to see vacant lots not as eyesores but as empty spaces inviting the viewer to fill them in with other forms, other structures that presage a new kind of city which will embody and nurture new life-affirming values in sharp contrast to the values of materialism, individualism and competition that have brought us to this denouement.” —Grace Lee Boggs, The Next American Revolution “The world of capitalist culture, economy,
    [Show full text]
  • Aotearoa Dissident Voice Is One Small Part 8Th Edition of Dissident Voice, Possibly the Last for Quite of a Continuing Subversive Current, One Which Wsome Time
    Issue 8 ~ March 2005 ~ Koha Sexism in the Anarchist Movement Also in this issue... Feedback from the Anarcha-feminist Conference An Interview with American Anti-Facist Michael Staudenmaier News, Reviews, Letters & more... introduction AOTEARO A Greetings Dissident... Dissident Voice elcome reader to the grand slapping new and beautifi ed Aotearoa Dissident Voice is one small part 8th edition of Dissident Voice, possibly the last for quite of a continuing subversive current, one which Wsome time. aims at the total and complete dissolution of Back at the end of 2003 when the fi rst issue of imminent rebel- all relationships, systems and institutions based lion appeared its mission was to encourage and foster community on hierarchy, domination and exploitation. and communication amongst anarchists and radical sympathisers by providing a space for This current is one which seeks new ways of participation, creativity and analysis. Since that time we have been fi ghting the good fi ght living with one another and our environment (and it has been a fi ght) getting people to write in particular, but also for donations and based on freedom, equality, cooperation subscriptions and mutual-aid in other forms. While funding and creating Dissident Voice has placed a lot of strain on the edcol- and respect. It is fundamentally anarchist; lective, we’re not the kind to piss and moan about our problems. We don’t mind however, and yet it is broader, including people from letting other people do it for us. Th is is an excerpt from a communiqué put out by Black diverse yet interrelated movements: anti- Flag, as they faced their own imminent dematerialisation: capitalists, indigenous rights activists, feminists, Th is lack of participation is, I fear, a common problem with anarchist journals and papers.
    [Show full text]
  • Punk Rock and the Socio-Politics of Place Dissertation Presented
    Building a Better Tomorrow: Punk Rock and the Socio-Politics of Place Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University by Jeffrey Samuel Debies-Carl Graduate Program in Sociology The Ohio State University 2009 Dissertation Committee: Townsand Price-Spratlen, Advisor J. Craig Jenkins Amy Shuman Jared Gardner Copyright by Jeffrey S. Debies-Carl 2009 Abstract Every social group must establish a unique place or set of places with which to facilitate and perpetuate its way of life and social organization. However, not all groups have an equal ability to do so. Rather, much of the physical environment is designed to facilitate the needs of the economy—the needs of exchange and capital accumulation— and is not as well suited to meet the needs of people who must live in it, nor for those whose needs are otherwise at odds with this dominant spatial order. Using punk subculture as a case study, this dissertation investigates how an unconventional and marginalized group strives to manage ‘place’ in order to maintain its survival and to facilitate its way of life despite being positioned in a relatively incompatible social and physical environment. To understand the importance of ‘place’—a physical location that is also attributed with meaning—the dissertation first explores the characteristics and concerns of punk subculture. Contrary to much previous research that focuses on music, style, and self-indulgence, what emerged from the data was that punk is most adequately described in terms of a general set of concerns and collective interests: individualism, community, egalitarianism, antiauthoritarianism, and a do-it-yourself ethic.
    [Show full text]
  • International Medical Corps Afghanistan
    Heading Folder Afghanistan Afghanistan - Afghan Information Centre Afghanistan - International Medical Corps Afghanistan - Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) Agorist Institute Albee, Edward Alianza Federal de Pueblos Libres American Economic Association American Economic Society American Fund for Public Service, Inc. American Independent Party American Party (1897) American Political Science Association (APSA) American Social History Project American Spectator American Writer's Congress, New York City, October 9-12, 1981 Americans for Democratic Action Americans for Democratic Action - Students for Democractic Action Anarchism Anarchism - A Distribution Anarchism - Abad De Santillan, Diego Anarchism - Abbey, Edward Anarchism - Abolafia, Louis Anarchism - ABRUPT Anarchism - Acharya, M. P. T. Anarchism - ACRATA Anarchism - Action Resource Guide (ARG) Anarchism - Addresses Anarchism - Affinity Group of Evolutionary Anarchists Anarchism - Africa Anarchism - Aftershock Alliance Anarchism - Against Sleep and Nightmare Anarchism - Agitazione, Ancona, Italy Anarchism - AK Press Anarchism - Albertini, Henry (Enrico) Anarchism - Aldred, Guy Anarchism - Alliance for Anarchist Determination, The (TAFAD) Anarchism - Alliance Ouvriere Anarchiste Anarchism - Altgeld Centenary Committee of Illinois Anarchism - Altgeld, John P. Anarchism - Amateur Press Association Anarchism - American Anarchist Federated Commune Soviets Anarchism - American Federation of Anarchists Anarchism - American Freethought Tract Society Anarchism - Anarchist
    [Show full text]
  • Navigating the Complex Landscape of Gender Remains Problematic For
    HOME AWAY FROM HOME OR REALLY THE FREEDOM MISSION REMOTe – an island in a sea ISSUE 20 EXPENSIVE PRISON? The core of modern anarchism is not OF STARTUPS A look inside the world August 18, 2014 Critic investigates complaints the napalm, violence and drugs that of going it alone as a young critic.co.nz regarding hall life. PAGE 18 people often expect. PAGE 20 entrepreneur. PAGE 28 Trans Navigating the complex landscapelife of gender* remains problematic for many. pg24 ISSUE 20 August 18, 2014 NEWS & OPINION FEATURES CULTURE ABOVE: From “The freedom 20 | THE FREEDOM MISSION 33 | ART mission” They cook soup, not napalm; they respond to aggression with 34 | FILM Illustration: passive observation, not violence; the atmosphere is homely and 36 | FOOD Daniel Blackball relaxed. The setting feels like a flat, not the heart of Dunedin’s largest anarchist collective. 37 | GAMES COVER: 38 | MUSIC By Loulou Callister-Baker From 18 | HOME AWAY FROM HOME OR 40 | BOOKS "Trans* life” REALLY EXPENSIVE PRISON? 24 | TRANS* LIFE 43 | TOO MUCH SCREENS Illustration: Following reports from past and Gender identity is so ingrained in our culture that we often don’t Daniel Blackball 46 | LOVE IS BLIND present students from the University think about it until we meet somebody who doesn’t conform to of Otago Halls of Residence, Critic has traditional ideas of a “masculine man” or a “feminine woman.” spoken to numerous parties to address Even with advances, such as the legalisation of same-sex marriage complaints regarding hall life. last year, being trans* presents legal and social problems simply By Josie Cochrane because their personal identity does not match our arbitrary ideas of “ “male” and “female.” By Lucy Hunter “An anarchist cooking” – you may wonder – 04 | NEWS “could she be making napalm?” When Bell 12 | SPORT isn’t looking I stare down into the large pot 26 | REMOTe – an island in a sea on the donated stovetop.
    [Show full text]
  • Looking Past the Ontology of American Homeownership Through the Lens of Detroit Conor Mckay Allerton Vassar College
    Vassar College Digital Window @ Vassar Senior Capstone Projects 2018 Not all trees are timber: looking past the ontology of American homeownership through the lens of Detroit Conor Mckay Allerton Vassar College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalwindow.vassar.edu/senior_capstone Recommended Citation Allerton, Conor Mckay, "Not all trees are timber: looking past the ontology of American homeownership through the lens of Detroit" (2018). Senior Capstone Projects. 771. https://digitalwindow.vassar.edu/senior_capstone/771 This Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Window @ Vassar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Senior Capstone Projects by an authorized administrator of Digital Window @ Vassar. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NOT ALL TREES ARE TIMBER LOOKING PAST THE ONTOLOGY OF AMERICAN HOMEOWNERSHIP THROUGH THE LENS OF DETROIT Conor McKay Allerton April 27, 2018 Senior Thesis Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Arts in Urban Studies Vassar College Lisa Brawley, Advisor Leonard Nevarez, Advisor TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 2 INTRODUCTION 3 CONTEXT 7 Homebuilding and Foundations of Nationalism 7 Homeownership as American Capitalism 9 Modern American Housing Ideology Introduced 13 Homeownership Propaganda Solidified 16 Black Homeownership 19 DETROIT pt 1 23 How Did We Get Here? 24 The Crash 30 A Modern Terra Nova 32 What Gentrification Looks Like 35 The Farm 36 The Brand 39 Speculative Detroit 44 I Found My Old House in Detroit Today 49 CRITIQUE 54 Creating a Citizenry 54 Homeownership and the National Agenda 58 The Homeownership Model 61 Homogenization of Thought 63 Private Property, Critically 66 Racializing Land 68 Ontological Practice 71 DETROIT pt 2 74 Central Detroit Christian 75 Cass Community Social Services 79 Jefferson East Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • We Never Sleep
    Wt J^eber Newsletter of the Anarchist Prisoners' Legal Aid Network November 2002 - Vol. 3 No. 1 ^tv^.g?,vt Anarchist Prisoners' Legal Aid Network 818 SW 3rd Ave PMB #354 / Portland, OR / 97204 / USA weneversleep®ziplip.com "We Never Sleep was the name of a 'zine put out by former prisoner Paul-X, who worked to bring news from prison to the community before taking his own life when the pressures outside prison became unbearable. The name reflect; our nature and resolve as anarchists." Notes from Portland formed Out of Control, a prison support We Never Sleep is back! Our prolonged group out of the Bay Area which provides hiatus in publication reflects a period of much-needed assistance to women regrouping on the outside, to lay a solid prisoners. Bo stressed the lack of support foundation for this project's continuance. women receive compared to men, noting We now hope to resume regular publication, that the visiting rooms in women's prisons and look forward to receiving your are nearly empty. Bo spoke with passion and contributions for the next newsletter. wisdom as a powerful voice for incarcerated With regular censorship of this and women. Much can be learned from her other anarchist publications by the Oregon experience and conviction. Department of Corrections, those who refuse Chris Plummer, a longtime to give in to the pettiness of ODOC's mail anarchist, anti-racist and founder of the rooms are fighting back. See our back cover United Anarchist Front was recently for news about Brian McCarvill's current released from prison after serving over eight legal challenge.
    [Show full text]
  • Autonomia in the Anthropocene: New Challenges to Radical Politics
    Sara Nelson and Bruce Braun Autonomia in the Anthropocene: New Challenges to Radical Politics The theoretical innovations that emerged out of the Italian Autonomia movement of the 1970s have enjoyed a striking revival in Anglophone critical scholarship in the past two decades, informing a generation of political activism that erupted in force with the alter-globalization move- ments of the late 1990s. In the midst of the “Ital- ian miracle” of industrial growth following the country’s postwar devastation, a broad-based movement of workers, students, and intellectuals refused capital’s “gift” of work (Tronti 2007) and advanced a politics of self-determination and self- valorization outside of state and party politics. Autonomia, Italian for autonomy, referred both to the ontological priority of labor power vis-à-vis capital and to a rejection of the bureaucratic poli- tics of compromise characteristic of the establish- ment Left.1 Among the movement’s ongoing lega- cies is a vibrant intellectual tradition that has transformed established categories of Marxist analysis to contend with the changing political terrain that accompanied the rise of what is now referred to as a post-Fordist mode of production. Along with Latin American and indigenous anti- colonial movements, Autonomia forms one of sev- eral intellectual undercurrents nourishing the The South Atlantic Quarterly 116:2, April 2017 doi 10.1215/00382876-3829368 © 2017 Duke University Press Downloaded from http://read.dukeupress.edu/south-atlantic-quarterly/article-pdf/116/2/223/471692/ddsaq_116_2_01Nelson_Fpp.pdf by guest on 23 September 2021 224 The South Atlantic Quarterly • April 2017 turn toward direct, horizontal democratic organization outside of the repre- sentative structures of electoral politics and oriented toward a horizon of liberation.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politicization of Labor in 1905: the Case of Odessa Salesclerks
    Swarthmore College Works History Faculty Works History Fall 1990 The Politicization Of Labor In 1905: The Case Of Odessa Salesclerks Robert Weinberg Swarthmore College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-history Part of the History Commons Let us know how access to these works benefits ouy Recommended Citation Robert Weinberg. (1990). "The Politicization Of Labor In 1905: The Case Of Odessa Salesclerks". Slavic Review. Volume 49, Issue 3. 427-445. DOI: 10.2307/2499988 https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-history/114 This work is brought to you for free by Swarthmore College Libraries' Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Faculty Works by an authorized administrator of Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Politicization of Labor in 1905: The Case of Odessa Salesclerks Author(s): Robert Weinberg Source: Slavic Review, Vol. 49, No. 3 (Autumn, 1990), pp. 427-445 Published by: Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2499988 Accessed: 08-04-2016 17:33 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://about.jstor.org/terms JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR,
    [Show full text]
  • The National Life Story Collection
    IN PARTNERSHIP WITH AN ORAL HISTORY OF BRITISH FASHION Tommy Roberts Interviewed by Anna Dyke C1046/12 IMPORTANT Please refer to the Oral History curators at the British Library prior to any publication or broadcast from this document. Oral History The British Library 96 Euston Road London NW1 2DB United Kingdom +44 [0]20 7412 7404 [email protected] Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of this transcript, however no transcript is an exact translation of the spoken word, and this document is intended to be a guide to the original recording, not replace it. Should you find any errors please inform the Oral History curators. NATIONAL LIFE STORY COLLECTION INTERVIEW SUMMARY SHEET Title Page Ref. No.: C1046/12/01-39 Wav file Refs.: Collection title: Oral History of British Fashion Interviewee’s surname: Roberts Title: Mr Interviewee’s forenames: Thomas Stephen Sex: Male Occupation: Boutique Owner Date of birth: 1942 Mother’s occupation: Housewife Father’s occupation: Businessman Date(s) of recording and tracks (from-to): 01.08.2005 (track 1-8), 19.08.2005 (track 9-13), 30.08.2005 (14-21), 12.09.05 (track 22-32), 21.09.05 (track 32-39) Location of interview: Interviewee’s home, Dover; except 19.08.05 at Interviewee’s shop, Hackney Name of interviewer: Anna Dyke Type of recorder: Marantz PMD660 Total no. of tracks: 39 Recording Format: Wav 16bit 48khz Mono or stereo: Stereo Burned to DVD(s) Duration: 16 hours 25 minutes Additional material: Copyright/Clearance: Interview finished, full clearance given. Interviewer’s comments: Background noise from interviewee’s shop/customers 19.08.05 Tommy Roberts Page 1 C1046/12/01 [Track 1] Okay, are you ready? Okay.
    [Show full text]
  • Left Out? the Extra-Parliamentary Left in NZ
    LEFT OUT? The Extra-Parliamentary Left in Aotearoa/NZ from 1999 to 2008 Tyler West Department of Politics University of Otago February 2018 Word Count: 19,964 Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the degree of Master of Politics Left Out? The Extra-Parliamentary Left during the Fifth Labour Government Abstract The Fifth Labour Government of Helen Clark entered parliament to assumptions that after the period of neoliberal restructuring from 1984 to 1999, the political left in New Zealand had recaptured not only power in parliament but a genuine widespread public support. The scholarly literature that focuses on the period of the Fifth Labour Government generally ignores political developments and events to the left of Labour. Yet social and economic struggles which occurred beyond the bounds of parliament throughout this period. Critical research, or even just documentation, on the extra-parliamentary left is scarce in New Zealand and the available sources of information remain highly fragmented. The first purpose of this study is to establish a coherent narrative of the activities of the extra-parliamentary left over the period from 1999 to 2008, to help fill a major gap in the existing literature. This is to be done in the context of an overall analysis of the socio- economic context of the period. This study examines the interactions these movements and organisations had with the parties in government; parties that were both the focus of their political campaigning and supposedly on ‘their side’ of New Zealand politics. This study also explores issues from the debate on the left over whether a reformist or revolutionary strategy should be adopted to promote progressive political change.
    [Show full text]
  • Dance of Dogs: the Radical Heritage of Folk Puppetry
    DANCE OF DOGS: THE RADICAL HERITAGE OF FOLK PUPPETRY By Brian Deller “Art is not a mirror, but a hammer in which to shape reality” Bertrolt Brecht “Our rage is our culture. Our art is not some idly sought for indulgence, nor selfish grasping for possessions. Yes, they might have purchased our products, but the true art is in our souls. The treasure within, the ultimate weapon with which to disarm those who believe that power is measured in material values. Our art, our culture and our love are a torch of hope passed from generation to generation” Penny Rimbaud 1 INTRO They can found in basements, public spaces, cafes, drinking holes and amidst protests today just as they have been for hundreds of years. They can be a hundred feet high or the size of your finger. You can take years to create them with an extravagant budget or make them in mere minutes with found objects. Despite the incredible advancements of technology, they are often quite similar to what they have been for ages. Perhaps this is why they’re dismissed as out of place in a society upon the cutting edge. Yet, I’ve seen them adapt to technology without losing their innate wonder. In the right hands they can be a very dangerous weapon. I’ve wondered why puppetry has fascinated me. Perhaps it has something to do with the intersection of this art form and my own “radical” visions for a better society. Folk puppetry addresses how humans envision their world and themselves. Before the cinema and television, puppetry was a widespread mode of expression.
    [Show full text]