Academic literature on the topic 'Chinese New Zealand'

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Journal articles on the topic "Chinese New Zealand"

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Xu, B., N. Shaw, M. Gee, and D. A. J. Teulon. "A quantitative comparison of articles on two pests and two pathogens of biosecurity risk to New Zealand extracted from International and Chinese databases." New Zealand Plant Protection 69 (January 8, 2016): 176–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.30843/nzpp.2016.69.5889.

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New Zealands increasing trade and tourism with Asia and especially China brings with it the need to understand the biosecurity risk to New Zealand from these countries This study compared the number of articles on two Chinese horticultural pests and two Chinese horticultural plant pathogens both of biosecurity relevance for New Zealand which were extracted using webbased searches conducted on two international and three Chinese databases There were up to 35 times more articles found in Chinese databases searched with Chinese characters than found in international databases searched with Latin script The quality of information from the articles in any of these databases was not examined Based on these results it would be prudent to explore further the information found in Chinese articles stored in Chinese databases to determine their relevance to New Zealands biosecurity system Searching Chinese databases with Chinese characters in combination with the more usual searches in international databases might ensure a more comprehensive coverage and could help to reduce the biosecurity risk to New Zealand in the future
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Xu, Junqian, and Yuanyuan Wu. "A Comparative Study of the Role of Australia and New Zealand in Sustainable Dairy Competition in the Chinese Market after the Dairy Safety Scandals." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 12 (December 15, 2018): 2880. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122880.

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After the melamine milk scandal in 2008, China’s global imports of dairy products soared, especially after FTAs had been established with Australia and New Zealand. The dairy products of the two countries have a unique competitive trading advantage in the Chinese market. However, at a time when Chinese consumers are increasingly dependent on imported dairy products, a succession of whey protein scandals affecting New Zealand’s dairy products in 2013 had a negative psychological impact on Chinese importers and consumers, and this even affected the import status of New Zealand dairy imports to the Chinese market. The present paper, based on the United Nations Comtrade Harmonized System, studies the role of Australia and New Zealand in China’s dairy market. It calculates the trade competitiveness index, revealing the relative competitive advantages of Australia and New Zealand, and investigates the impact of the dairy products from these countries on China’s imports from the rest of the world across six dairy sectors in the period 1992–2017. We find that, under the food safety laws, the relative dairy import prices, milk scandals, and Free Trade Agreements, together with the competitive advantages of Australia and New Zealand, had a varied impact on the corresponding Chinese dairy imports across the relevant sectors in the context of China food safety laws after the melamine milk scandal. These findings acknowledge Australia and New Zealand’s competitiveness in the international dairy trade, and also lead to suggestions regarding their competitiveness and sustainable development in the Chinese market.
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Hutchings, Scott C., Luis Guerrero, Levi Smeets, Graham T. Eyres, Patrick Silcock, Enrique Pavan, and Carolina E. Realini. "Cross-Cultural Differences in the Perception of Lamb between New Zealand and Chinese Consumers in New Zealand." Foods 11, no. 14 (July 11, 2022): 2045. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11142045.

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This study investigated differences between general New Zealand consumers and ethnic Chinese consumers living in New Zealand regarding the importance of lamb attributes at the point of purchase and opinions of New Zealand lamb. A central location test survey was undertaken with 156 New Zealand consumers living in Dunedin, New Zealand, and 159 Chinese consumers living in Auckland, New Zealand. In terms of importance at the point of purchase, Chinese consumers rated a number of attributes as more important than New Zealand consumers by a difference of >1.0 on a 9-point Likert scale for importance: animal origin, feeding, age, presence of hormones/residues, traceability, food safety, place of purchase, brand/quality label, and label information (p < 0.05). New Zealand consumers rated the price of other meats and animal welfare as more important than Chinese consumers (p < 0.05); however, the differences in scores were <1.0. In terms of opinions, Chinese consumers also considered New Zealand lamb to be better value for money, more additive-free, and more likely to make people feel good (p < 0.05), by scores >1.0 on a 7-point Likert scale for agreement. New Zealand consumers considered New Zealand lamb more traditional and boring (p < 0.05); however, the differences in scores were <1.0.
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Jiancheng, Zheng. "Chinese New Zealanders in Aotearoa: Media consumption and political engagement." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 28, no. 1 & 2 (July 31, 2022): 189–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v28i1and2.1220.

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This article outlines work in progress on project concerning interactions between the Chinese community in New Zealand, ethnic Chinese media, mainstream English language media, particularly around the New Zealand 2020 general election. A wealth of past research has discussed ethnic Chinese language media in New Zealand, the Chinese diaspora, and general elections. This study will go beyond previous research to include mainstream English language media as part of the media resources available to Chinese New Zealanders considering participating as voters in general elections. For Chinese New Zealanders, understanding the diversity of media in New Zealand is likely to have a positive effect on their voting decisions, and encourage more thinking about government policies.
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&NA;. "Medsafe New Zealand withdraws 11 Chinese medicines." Reactions Weekly &NA;, no. 937 (February 2003): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/00128415-200309370-00006.

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Ryan, Chris, and Jade Xie. "Chinese Students – A New Zealand Tourism Niche?" International Journal of Tourism Sciences 3, no. 1 (January 2003): 95–120. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15980634.2003.11434542.

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Ryan, Chris, and Zhidan Zhang. "Chinese students: Holiday behaviours in New Zealand." Journal of Vacation Marketing 13, no. 2 (April 2007): 91–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1356766707074734.

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Friesen, Manying Ip Wardlow. "The New Chinese Community in New Zealand: Local Outcomes of Transnationalism." Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 10, no. 2 (June 2001): 213–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/011719680101000201.

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The new Chinese community in New Zealand (formed since 1987) is made up of immigrants from the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Malaysia as well as other countries. Initially looked upon as harbingers of the “Asian economic miracle” by the New Zealand government, the new arrivals met with numerous unforeseen difficulties. This article is based on the findings of surveys and in-depth interviews in which the primary migrants were asked about their motives for migration, the economic and social outcomes of their migration, their perception of the comparative strengths of their native land and New Zealand, and their long-term view on settlement and return migration. The surveys are also set against background statistics from the 1996 census as well as immigration figures up to 2000. The findings challenge the assumption of the importance of the economic motivation of migration, and point to the primacy of social and environmental factors. They also suggest that transnationalism is a long-term strategy, instead of a temporary expediency, but also that most Chinese migrants in New Zealand have tried to integrate with the host society when possible.
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Huffer, Ian. "The circulation of Chinese film in New Zealand as a potential platform for soft power." Media International Australia 176, no. 1 (June 16, 2020): 78–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x20921570.

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New Zealand is one of only a handful of countries worldwide in which Chinese blockbusters are regularly released in cinemas and has also been a site of increasing debate regarding China’s soft power. This article consequently examines the circulation of Chinese films in New Zealand, not only through theatrical exhibition but also non-theatrical channels, and considers how this might build a platform for soft power. It considers the balance between ‘official’ and ‘unofficial’ mainland filmmaking, and between mainland filmmaking and Hong Kong, Taiwanese and diasporic filmmaking, along with the target audiences for these different channels. The article shows that, taken as a whole, the distribution and exhibition landscape for Chinese film in New Zealand builds a successful platform for the People’s Republic of China’s aspirations of winning the ‘hearts and minds’ of overseas Chinese, while also being characterised by clear limitations in reaching non-Chinese audiences in New Zealand.
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Ge, Gloria L., Christina Stringer, and Daniel Z. Ding. "Chinese FDI in New Zealand: What Are Chinese Investors Looking For?" Thunderbird International Business Review 59, no. 3 (September 22, 2016): 385–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/tie.21871.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Chinese New Zealand"

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Li, Wendy Wen. "Understanding Chinese international students' gambling experiences in New Zealand." The University of Waikato, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10289/2409.

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ABSTRACT This research investigated Chinese international students' gambling experiences in New Zealand. It explored why some students become involved in gambling and how their gambling behaviour changes over time. Initial and follow-up interviews were conducted with nine male and three female students. Initial interviews focused on participants' gambling biographies in China and New Zealand. Cultural influences on their gambling experiences, and possible links between the development of gambling problems and their study experiences in New Zealand, were discussed. Follow-up interviews gathered further information on participants' gambling experiences, paying particular attention to their gambling activities over the six months prior to, and then after, the initial interviews. The methodology and analysis in this study were informed by a narrative approach. Findings suggest that Chinese international students rarely reported that they had problems relating to gambling in China. However, some participants in this study presented as problem gamblers in New Zealand. Study shock, acculturation stress, not feeling welcomed by the host society and achievement anxiety, all played a part in participants' problem gambling in New Zealand. These participants claimed that they usually started gambling recreationally, but then gradually shifted to self-reported problem gamblers. Problem gamblers were distinguished by prolonged gambling hours, wagering greater amounts of money, an augmented craving for winning money, and an inability to stop gambling at will in a single session. In this study, many participants who might have a gambling problem, had achieved some success in changing their gambling behaviour. Filial piety, acknowledgement of the importance of family, peer models, the experience of success, and financial hardship were some of the catalysts for stopping gambling. In addition, support from families, the community, professional services and exclusion programmes also assisted participants to address problems related to gambling. Successful re-rooting in New Zealand is significant in participants' post-change life. Positive post-change lifestyles involving aspects such as spirituality, music, study and work, supported Chinese international students to maintain change. This research demonstrates multiple levels of analysis, which adds to our knowledge about the socio-cultural meanings of gambling among Chinese international students. A number of recommendations are made for preventing and reducing the negative consequences of gambling for students.
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Yee, Beven. "Enhancing security : a grounded theory of Chinese survival in New Zealand." Thesis, University of Canterbury. School of Educational Studies and Human Development, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1771.

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This study examines how an ethnic minority group copes under conditions of adversity. It follows in the tradition of a wide body of qualitative work that has investigated racial minorities and their everyday experiences. Much of the existing work, however, focuses on merely describing thematically and/or conceptually what goes on. The current study aims to construct an integrated conceptual understanding of how a minority group engages in the coping process. More specifically, this study seeks to develop a substantive theory that can explain and predict human behaviour. Grounded theory methodology was used in aid of the theory development process (see Glaser and Strauss, 1967). Put simply, grounded theory is an inductive methodology that attempts to understand action from the perspective of social actors (Brooks, 1998). To uncover the coping process, the
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Liu, Liangni. "Home on the move : new Chinese immigrants to New Zealand as transnationals." Thesis, University of Auckland, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/6976.

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One of the most salient features of new Chinese migrants in recent years is transnational migration. The overall aim of this research is to investigate and understand Chinese transnational migration, based on a New Zealand context and the research focuses on new Chinese migrants from the People's Republic of China (PRC). This study has taken a longitudinal perspective to study PRC migrants' transnational movements and looks at their transnational migratory movements as a progressive and dynamic process. It has examined PRC migrants' initial motives for immigrating to New Zealand; the driving forces behind their adoption of a transnational lifestyle which includes leaving New Zealand to return to the PRC, moving to a third country or commuting across borders; family-related considerations; as well as their future movement intentions. The particular angle taken by this study is through exploring PRC migrants' conceptualisation of "home", citizenship, identity, and sense of belonging to provide a deeper understanding of their transnational migratory experiences. Both qualitative and quantitative methods were deployed to gather data. Qualitative interviews were conducted in multiple sites, including China, Australia and New Zealand. A quantitative online questionnaire survey was conducted globally via the World Wide Web. Both the qualitative interviews and the quantitative online survey show that PRC migrants possess great transnational mobility potential. The transnational movements that many PRC migrants engage in are the result of a combination of personal/family-related reasons and macro-level economic-political driving forces. Even though many PRC migrants originally immigrated to New Zealand for non-economic considerations, economic-related reasons contributed significantly to the decision to engage in later cross-border movements. In addition, PRC migrants intend to keep strong transnational connections with their homeland - China, as manifested by their frequent homeward travels, their strong family and personal networks, their intensive financial activities and investment in China, and a strong sense of 'being Chinese' and strong identification with China. It has been found that citizenship has no real direct effect on how PRC migrants identify themselves or their sense of belonging. In theoretical and methodological terms, this research offers some important implications. Firstly, migration studies should take a long-term perspective by looking at migration as an on-going process, a continuation of an initial moving away from a homeland. Thus, a flexible and more inclusive research framework can be formed. Secondly, the exploration of migrants' conceptualisation of “home” may open up an unconventional way of exploring how migrants' identity is constructed, and may provide valuable theoretical grounding for the understanding of the dynamic process of transnational migration. Lastly, my personal experience of conducting this research tells how powerful some traditional migration theories are in interpreting some aspects of PRC migrants' transnational movements. Some researchers in the field of migration studies passionately advocate that there is an urgent need of challenging the “old” migration theories; however, the real challenge that researchers face is how to tease out useful theoretical elements from both “old” and “new” theories and put them into use towards the research topic chosen.
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Zhu, Dan. "Managerial sex role stereotyping among Chinese students in New Zealand." Diss., Lincoln University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10182/822.

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The management literature in gender issues argues that in spite of the progress made in the last few decades, women still face difficulties in being accepted and recognised as managers because the manager’s role has been perceived as masculine. Gender stereotypes, hence, continue to become a barrier to women’s access to top management position. This study examines the perceptions of the relationship between sex role stereotypes and the perceived characteristics necessary for managerial success among Chinese students in New Zealand. The study sample consisted of 94 male Chinese students and 119 female Chinese students studying in New Zealand. In order to allow for cross-cultural comparisons, this study used a direct replication the Schein Descriptive Index (SDI) from previous study (Schein & Mueller, 1992). The male and female perceptions on the relationship between sex role stereotypes and characteristics were analysed separately. The results revealed that both male and female Chinese students in New Zealand perceive that successful middle managers possess characteristics, attitudes and temperaments more commonly ascribed to men than to women in general. In addition, the results were compared with previous studies conducted in China and Japan, New Zealand, America, Britain, Canada, and Germany. Our findings conclude that Asian people are worse than Western people in respect to managerial sex role stereotyping, particularly, Chinese males who show a very strong degree of managerial gender stereotyping. Multiple discriminant analysis was used to discriminate the relationship between men, women and middle managers on 92 items from the survey questionnaire. The analysis resulted in two separate canonical functions which distinguished between three groups women, men and managers).
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Yang, Lin. ""The Desert is now being flooded":A Study of the Emergence of Chinese-language Mediain New Zealand." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Journalism and Mass Communication, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1044.

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Focusing on the Chinese-language media in New Zealand largely run by the new immigrants since the late 1980s, this study aims to fill the significant gap between the long-time presence of the media in question and the lack of academic study of them. The thesis starts with a review of relevant literature, and a retrospect of the Chinese-language media and the ethnic Chinese community in New Zealand. A content analysis compares the Chinese-language print media with their mainstream Englishlanguage counterparts, emphasising the ethnicity-related reportage on front pages and in editorials. This comparison is extended in the case studies of news stories and editorials. An enhanced and diversified representation of ethnic Asians and more importantly, the Asian (Chinese) perspective in shaping news, are found to be the most salient alternativeness of Chinese-language media in New Zealand. When media identity is examined, it is argued the Chinese-language media exert their alternative input to the formation of New Zealand identity through this Asian (Chinese) perspective. However, the commercial orientation of the Chinese-language media, including the business associations and alliance with elites, has undermined their role as alternative media in a structural sense. The Chinese-language media do not challenge, but rather follow, the existing power relations and ideological infrastructure in media production. It is concluded that the 'alternativeness' of the Chinese-language media is salient in news content and the media's input in the formation of the New Zealand identity. However, the corporate way of organisation, coupled with the free-of-charge model, undermines the Chinese-language media's role in democratic communication and their alternative status.
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Hauraki, Jennifer. "A model minority?: Chinese youth and mental health services in New Zealand." Thesis, University of Auckland, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/1876.

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The 'model minority' label given to Chinese populations in New Zealand and other Western countries have made it difficult to truly comprehend the difficulties faced by some Chinese ethnic minorities. Despite comparable rates and types of mental health problems to their European counterparts, identifiable barriers have led to Chinese ethnic minorities underutilising mental health services. The present study investigated the mental health service utilisation in native- and foreign-born Chinese youth in New Zealand, paying particular attention to barriers to service utilisation and viable solutions for these difficulties. It consisted of three individual projects and explored the views of Chinese community and mental health professionals and Chinese university students, comparing their perspectives to university students of other ethnicities. Findings showed that despite a willingness to seek help from their family and mental health professionals (e.g., psychologists, school counsellors), respondents identified a myriad of obstacles to the help seeking of Chinese youth. These included physical barriers (e.g., financial and transport constraints), personal barriers (e.g., stigma, problems accepting their difficulties), service barriers (e.g., paucity of knowledge regarding mental health problems and available services) and family barriers (e.g., obstruction from family members). Family and service barriers distinguished the difficulties faced by Chinese in comparison to European youth, particularly with regards to the adherence of professionals to stereotypes of Chinese youth, a unique finding of this study. In order to reduce such barriers, the Chinese university students and professionals advocated for greater education regarding mental health problems and services in the Chinese community, education for Chinese parents regarding adolescent issues, an increase in the number of practicing Chinese professionals that is coupled with improved cross-cultural training for non-Chinese professionals, as well as individual assessment and treatment approaches with Chinese youth and their families.
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Li, Phoebe Hairong. "A Virtual Chinatown: the diasporic mediasphere of Chinese migrants in New Zealand." Thesis, University of Auckland, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/5561.

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This is a study of the social dynamics of the current Chinese migrant community in New Zealand through a critical analysis of the Auckland-based Chinese-language media. It combines two research fields, international migration studies and media studies, to conceptualise Chinese-language media as a specific type of alternative media in contemporary New Zealand. The Chinese population in New Zealand has rapidly increased through immigration since the passage of the 1987 Immigration Act; Chinese now comprise 3.4% of the New Zealand population, and a wide variety of Chinese-language media have accordingly thrived in New Zealand. In contrast to New Zealand mainstream media, these Chinese media serve the specific needs and interests of newly arrived and only minimally acculturated Chinese migrants. The research was conducted in three phases: quantitative and qualitative data were acquired from the content of Chinese-language media during the period of the 2005 New Zealand general election; qualitative data were obtained from focus groups and interviews with members of the Chinese audience subsequent to the election; qualitative data were generated from Chinese media personnel. The findings suggest that these Chinese-language media closely reflect and depict recent PRC Chinese migrants’ perceptions of New Zealand and aspirations towards their new life in the host country. Within the global context of the Chinese diaspora in historical and contemporary times, this research also introduces a new angle for exploring the socio-economic impacts of China as a rising superpower on New Zealand and the Pacific Rim.
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Su, Roger. "The motivations and investment preferences of Chinese investors who migrate to New Zealand." AUT University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10292/869.

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Chinese migrants play a serious role in their destination countries, and through demand, support high values in destination property and financial markets. Therefore, Chinese investors’ investment motivations, preferences and behaviours have a significant impact on the New Zealand economy. The objectives of this research are: to investigate the preferences (what kind of investment assets they prefer) and the motivations (why they chose New Zealand as their investment destination) of Chinese migrant investors. The findings will be a useful element in explaining New Zealand’s economic development, and in making financial decisions. It also will be important for the development of New Zealand’s growing finance industry and equity market. The researcher collected data from 20 respondents who are Chinese migrant investors who have made New Zealand their home. The collected data examines investors’ preferences and motivations, such as what kind of investment assets they prefer and the motivations which drive them to invest in New Zealand or elsewhere. Using a grounded theory methodology, the researcher draws some findings from the data analysis. Furthermore, using a constant comparative method, the researcher develops some preferred choices which explain Chinese migrant investors’ investment preferences and motivations. The core findings (called phenomena or categories) of Chinese migrant investors’ preferences and motivations in this study are listed below:  Home-bias investment behaviour – that is mainly China and New Zealand  Following past performance / herding behaviour  Seeking speculative opportunities – high return, high risk  Over confidence  Taxation evasion  Financial privacy Considering these core categories, the researcher re-tested and re-analysed all interview data. Two refined themes are drawn: 1. Chinese investors don’t understand investment; they seek speculative investment opportunities exemplifying non-professional opportunistic behaviours. 2. Chinese investors don’t take New Zealand as their preferred investment destination until they arrive in New Zealand. Finally, the researcher reconsiders both themes and other inferences, to develop a theory from the ground – exaggerated Chinese financial investment experiences are relayed to other Chinese, and influence investment preferences and motivations.
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Zhang, Qilong. "Parental involvement in early childhood education among Chinese immigrant and English speaking non-Chinese parents in New Zealand." Thesis, University of Auckland, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/18363.

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This study compared 120 Chinese immigrant parents and 127 English speaking non-Chinese parents on their parental involvement in early childhood education (ECE), and investigated the role of parenting beliefs, parenting practices, and demographic variables on the level of parental involvement. Parental involvement was measured with the Parental Family Involvement Questionnaire, which was administered to all parents, and interview data collected from 50 parents about reasons for early childhood education involvement. Parenting beliefs and practices were assessed with the Parental Role Construction for Involvement in the Child's Education Scale: Role Activity Beliefs, the Parental Sense of Competence Scale, and the Parenting Styles and Dimension Questionnaire (PSDQ). ECE practices to encourage parental involvement were also examined from interviews conducted with 30 kindergarten head teachers. Results showed that Chinese immigrant parents were less likely than non-Chinese parents to communicate with teachers, volunteer to help at the kindergarten, and participate in kindergarten decision making. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses revealed that, for the whole sample, role construction and self-efficacy were important predictors of communicating with teachers, volunteering to help at the kindergarten, and participating in kindergarten decision making. For the Chinese sample only, perceived opportunity for involvement, parent education and English language proficiency predicted communication with teachers, and opportunity for involvement was the only significant predictor of participating in kindergarten decision making. Parent interviews corroborated and supplemented these findings. Teacher interviews highlighted a range of communication strategies, policies and systems used by kindergartens to encourage parental involvement. Based on findings from parents and teachers this thesis makes some tentative recommendations for early childhood services, particularly about ways to increase Chinese immigrant parents' level of ECE involvement, such as helping Chinese immigrant parents to understand the importance of parental involvement, suggestions for enhancing the parenting confidence of Chinese immigrant parents, and their perceptions of opportunity for involvement, employing bilingual staff, and developing relationships with Chinese immigrant parents.
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Wu, Bin. ""Whose culture has capital?": Chinese skilled migrant mothers raising their children in New Zealand." AUT University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10292/911.

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This thesis is concerned with a group of Chinese skilled migrant mothers’ experiences in relation to their children’s early childhood care and education in New Zealand. Utilising Bourdieu’s concept of capital, habitus and field, the current research addresses the complexity and ambiguity of the Chinese migrant mothers' lives whose social position transcends multiple fields. Because their children attend mainstream education, and the local educational system is different from those where the migrant mothers were brought up, the migrant mothers had to transcend different cultural fields. Chinese skilled migrants, who were middle class professionals in their native country, usually experienced social and financial downturns in New Zealand. Although skilled, the migrant mothers encountered difficulties in finding paid employment that matched their pre-migration job status. These mothers were more likely to give up paid work or reduce paid working hours on the birth of their children than were their male partners. The current study focuses on these transcendent experiences, encompassing both embeddedness and ambiguity across different fields by examining the interplay of class, gender, and ethnicity in the daily lives of these mothers. Traditional interpretations of cultural capital usually refer only to dominant social and cultural capital, whereas the current thesis expands the concept to include both dominant and non-dominant forms of social and cultural capital. The findings showed that the migrant mothers redefined and reconstructed the concept of capital. The migrant mothers’ attitude towards mainstream education was ambiguous and complex: covering the full spectrum from willing embracing, reluctantly following, selectively utilising to firmly rejecting. Simultaneously, the mothers promoted, criticised, and rejected various traditional Chinese practices and beliefs in order to maximise benefits for their children.
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Books on the topic "Chinese New Zealand"

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Chinese opera. Wellington, N.Z: Victoria University Press, 2008.

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Wedde, Ian. Chinese opera. Wellington, N.Z: Victoria University Press, 2008.

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Wedde, Ian. Chinese opera. Wellington, N.Z: Victoria University Press, 2008.

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Ip, Manying. Re-examining Chinese transnationalism in Australia-New Zealand. Canberra: Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, 2001.

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Boileau, Joanna. Chinese Market Gardening in Australia and New Zealand. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51871-8.

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Transmigration and the new Chinese: Theories and practices from the New Zealand experience. [Hong Kong]: University of Hong Kong, 2011.

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Murphy, Nigel. The poll-tax in New Zealand. Wellington, N.Z: Office of Ethnic Affairs, Dept. of Internal Affairs, 2002.

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West Coast Historical and Mechanical Society, ed. Golden prospects: Chinese on the West Coast of New Zealand. Greymouth, N.Z: Shantytown (West Coast Historical & Mechanical Society Inc.), 2009.

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Fung, David. Turning stone into jade: The history of the New Zealand Chinese Association. Wellington: New Zealand Chinese Association, 2014.

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Ip, Manying. Home away from home: Life stories of Chinese women in New Zealand. Auckland: New Women's Press, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Chinese New Zealand"

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "Reverse remittance." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 92–105. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-6.

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "“Forced” transnational migration." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 69–77. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-4.

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "Re-grounding transnational migrant families in theories." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 25–45. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-2.

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "Seasonal parents/grandparents." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 78–91. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-5.

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "From inclusion to exclusion." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 46–68. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-3.

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "Introduction." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 1–24. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-1.

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Liu, Liangni Sally, and Guanyu Jason Ran. "Conclusion." In New Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand, 106–20. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003168218-7.

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Boileau, Joanna. "New Ideas in New Lands." In Chinese Market Gardening in Australia and New Zealand, 163–224. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51871-8_6.

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Liu, Liangni Sally. "New Chinese Immigration to New Zealand: Policies, Immigration Patterns, Mobility and Perception." In Contemporary Chinese Diasporas, 233–59. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-5595-9_11.

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Li, Phoebe H. "New Chinese Immigrants to New Zealand: A PRC Dimension*." In Migration in China and Asia, 229–44. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-8759-8_14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Chinese New Zealand"

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Chen, Yuanyuan, and Yisheng Lv. "Mobility Pattern Analysis during 2020 Chinese National Day under the COVID-19 pandemic." In 2022 Australian & New Zealand Control Conference (ANZCC). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/anzcc56036.2022.9966981.

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Yin, Hang. "Online homeland media and Chinese migrant netizens in New Zealand The construction of being ‘authentic Chinese’." In Annual International Conference on Journalism & Mass Communications. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-3729_jmcomm12.28.

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Jiang, Long, and Hideaki Goto. "Ensemble classifier with dividing training scheme for Chinese scene character recognition." In 2017 International Conference on Image and Vision Computing New Zealand (IVCNZ). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ivcnz.2017.8402476.

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Zhu, Jie, Quentin Stevens, and Charles Anderson. "Chinese Public Memorials: Under the Effect of Exclusively Pursuing Solemnness, Sacredness, and Grandness." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4010p4jpd.

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Authentic public memorials did not appear in the Chinese public space until the late 19th century. As a result of Western influence, many war memorials were built during the Republic of China era (1912-1949). Since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, the government has invested much in developing public spaces. Also, the government placed many memorials in Chinese cities to shape collective memory and urban identity. The affection of solemnness, sacredness, and grandness is the main affection that most memorials are intended to embody, particularly those that commemorate famous people, the government’s achievement, and the deceased from natural disasters and wars. By taking the example of memorials built from 1942 to the present in Chongqing, China, this paper critically examines changes over time in the forms. In addition, taking the analysis result from memorial forms as a base and combining widely cited literature in Chinese and English, the paper further explores the negative impacts of the intensive focus of solemnness, sacredness, and grandness. This paper’s analysis identifies standard, persistent and symbolic features in Chinese memorials, despite the diverse landscape elements and advanced construction techniques. Key themes emerge from this research are solemnness, sacredness, and grandness. Also, it reveals the issues raised by the exclusive pursuit of these affections, including similar memorial forms, insufficient engagement of memorials, and the unitary research topics on memorials.
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Li, Long. "Family Language Policy and Immigrant Chinese Children’s Bilingual Development in New Zealand Context." In The European Conference on Language Learning 2021. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2188-112x.2021.6.

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Johnson, Henry. "Charlie King, Chinese Music, and Media Representation in a New Zealand Gold Mining Setting." In – The Barcelona Conference on Arts, Media & Culture 2020. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2435-9475.2020.5.

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Xue, Sijia, and Dave Yan. "A Case Study of a Chinese Postgraduate Student's Perceptions of Studying in a New Zealand University." In 2015 International Conference on Social Science and Higher Education. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icsshe-15.2015.10.

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Johnson, Henry. "Chinese Music, Difference and Inter-community Relations in a 19th-century New Zealand Gold-mining Setting." In The Asian Conference on Asian Studies 2020. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2187-4735.2020.2.

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Jin, Xin. "Making with the Past: Bricolages in Wang Shu’s Design Writings and Built Projects." In The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online: SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4002phgul.

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This study explores how design research writing can engage with historical reference in a radical way. In the 2002 essay “Shijian Tingzhi de Chengshi” (“City Froze in Time”), based on Chapter 2 of his 2000 PhD thesis, Xugou Chengshi (Fictionalising City), the Chinese architect Wang Shu proposes reinterpreting the traditional Chinese architecture and city through the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss’s notion of “bricolage”, which is defined as making do with available objects. Bricolage is informative for understanding Wang’s design undertakings, which involve skilful adaptations of vernacular building types and construction techniques in new urban projects. Nevertheless, its fundamental role in shaping Wang’s design writings is yet to be fully understood. In his design writings, Wang employs a specific quotation method whereby words and paragraphs from other writers’ preexisting works are reused and woven into new textual compositions. Through formal analysis of “City Froze in Time” and comparisons of compositional patterns between the essay and Wang’s built projects, mainly the Xiangshan Campus of the China Academy of Art, Phase II, Hangzhou (2007) and the Ningbo History Museum, Ningbo (2008), this piece explores three issues. First, it demonstrates how textual fragments found in the past and uttered by others undergo bricolage in Wang’s essay. Second, it foregrounds the intention behind Wang’s chosen writing strategy and investigates broader critical issues, such as authorship and the past–present nonlinear order associated with Wang’s strategy. Third, it expresses how historical materials – understanding “materials” in an inclusive sense – are treated in comparable ways in Wang’s written and built works. By examining Wang’s case, this paper highlights a radical case of contemporary architectural research writing in which an attempt is made to demolish the boundary between theory and design by extending the make-do logic of design into the field of design reflection.
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Johnson, Henry. "Fan So and Early Chinese Musicians in Aotearoa New Zealand: Musical Creativity in an Era of Colonialism, Migration and Discrimination." In The Asian Conference on Arts & Humanities 202. The International Academic Forum(IAFOR), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22492/issn.2186-229x.2021.10.

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Reports on the topic "Chinese New Zealand"

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Rickels, Wilfried. Database and report on currently already existing or announced ocean NETs projects, including a world map of projects. OceanNets, August 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3289/oceannets_d1.8.

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Emissions trading systems (ETS) and markets usually do not allow for the inclusion of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) activities and if they do, removal activities are primarily restricted to afforestation. The New Zealand emission trading system (NZ ETS), for examples, integrates afforestation, and the California Low-Fuel Standard, the Quebec ETS and the Chinese ETS permit the restricted inclusion of afforestation offsets. Furthermore, the California Low-Carbon Fuel Standard System allows for the inclusion of removal via Direct Air Capture. In combination with the 45Q tax credit program, the largest incentives for CDR via Negative Emissions Technologies (NETs) are currently provided in the US. However, both do not yet allow for the inclusion of ocean-based carbon removal. Hence, we provide first a brief overview about the NZ ETS and its inclusion of afforestation, pointing out that the concept will likely not be applicable to ocean-based CDR with the potential exemption of blue carbon projects. Second, we discuss the 45Q tax credit program, the California Low-Fuel Standard System, and the California Compliance Offset Scheme. Third, we provide an overview about the company database related to ocean-based carbon removal. Fourth, we briefly look at the voluntary carbon market, providing some insights for carbon removal accounting.
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