000 02940nam a22003377a 4500
999 _c6543
_d6543
005 20250625151522.0
008 200224s2011 -nz| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a978-86969-453-1
040 _aAFVC
082 _a342.930872 MIK
100 _91712
_aMikaere, Ani
245 _aColonising myths - Māori realities :
_bHe rukuruku whakaaro
_cAni Mikaere
260 _aWellington, New Zealand
_bTe Wānanga o Raukawa,
_c2011
300 _axxiii, 348 pages ; 21 cm
505 _aPreface -- Introduction -- Stories of Survival: Working Inside the Imposter Legal System -- 1. Rhetoric, Reality and Recrimination: Striving to Fulfil the Bicultural Commitment at Waikato Law School -- 2. He Whaipaanga Hou Ten Years On: The Impact of He Whaipaanga Hou on Legal Education -- 3. On Being Māori and Being a Lawyer: The Musings of a Māori Legal Academic. -- Talking Back: A Māori View of Pākehā Hopes and Misconceptions -- 4. Racism in Contemporary Aotearoa: A Pakeha Problem -- 5. Are We All New Zealanders Now? A Māori Response to the Pākehā Quest for Indigeneity. -- The Relationship between Tangata Whenua and the Crown --6. Te Tiriti and the Treaty: Seeking to Reconcile the Irreconcilable in the Name of Truth -- 7. Three (Million) Strikes and Still Not Out: The Crown as the Consummate Recidivist. -- Tikanga Māori and Western Values -- 8. Collective Rights and Gender Issues: A Māori Woman's Perspective -- 9. Cultural Invasion Continued: The Ongoing Colonisation of Tikanga Māori -- 10. How Will Future Generations Judge Us? Some Thoughts on the Relationship between Crown Law and Tikanga Māori. -- Tikanga at the Centre -- 11. Whakapapa and Taonga: Connecting the Memory -- 12. Some Implications of a Māori Worldview. -- List of Information Sources -- Index.
520 _aThis book brings together a collection of papers that reflect on the impact of Pākehā law and values on Māori legal thought and practice. They discuss issues such as the illogicality of seeking justice for Māori within the confines of the colonised law; the need for Pākehā to confront the implications of their position as inheritors of the spoils of colonisation; the myths that have been constructed to obscure the true nature of the Crown-Māori relationship as it was established in 1840; the insidious effect of Pākehā thought on Māori conceptions of reality; and the importance of reinstating tikanga at the heart of Māori thinking. (From the back cover). Record #6543
650 _aCOLONISATION
_95710
650 _aCULTURE
_9179
650 _aJUSTICE
_9333
650 _aLAW
_9336
650 _aMĀORI
_9357
650 0 _98581
_aPĀKEHĀ
650 _aRACISM
_93087
650 0 _95862
_aTreaty of Waitangi
650 _aTAIPŪWHENUATANGA
_95548
650 0 _aTIRITI O WAITANGI
_912490
650 0 _aTIKANGA TUKU IHO
_95542
650 _aWHAKAHĀWEA IWI
_97831
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
942 _2ddc
_cBOOK