Academic literature on the topic 'New Zealand Family Court'

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Journal articles on the topic "New Zealand Family Court"

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Cartwright, S. R. "THE NEW ZEALAND FAMILY COURT - AN OVERVIEW." Family Court Review 25, no. 1 (March 15, 2005): 29–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.174-1617.1987.tb00159.x.

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Boshier, Peter, Nicola Taylor, and Fred Seymour. "EARLY INTERVENTION IN NEW ZEALAND FAMILY COURT CASES." Family Court Review 49, no. 4 (October 2011): 818–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-1617.2011.01416.x.

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Davidson, G. P. "Family Court Mediation: New Zealand Practices and Perspectives." Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy 8, no. 1 (March 1987): 18–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1467-8438.1987.tb01194.x.

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Taylor, Nicola. "Child Participation: Overcoming Disparity between New Zealand’s Family Court and Out-of-court Dispute Resolution Processes." International Journal of Children’s Rights 25, no. 3-4 (November 17, 2017): 658–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718182-02503004.

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This article considers children’s right to participate in the context of private law disputes concerning their post-separation, day-to-day care and contact arrangements. In New Zealand the approach to ascertaining children’s views has been both long-standing and systematic for contested proceedings within the Family Court (via children’s legal representatives and judicial meetings with children). However, major reform of the family justice system in 2014 shifted the emphasis to new out-of-court processes for resolving post-separation parenting arrangements. The reforms were disappointingly silent on the issue of children’s participation in the new Family Dispute Resolution services, particularly mediation. A disparity has thus arisen between opportunities for children’s engagement in New Zealand’s in-court and out-of-court dispute resolution processes. Research evidence and international developments in Australia and England and Wales are reviewed for the guidance they can offer in remedying this in New Zealand and elsewhere.
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BRIDGE, CAROLINE. "The New Zealand Family Court: its structure and process." Children & Society 3, no. 4 (December 18, 2007): 325–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1099-0860.1989.tb00355.x.

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Cartwright, Judge Silvia. "The New Zealand family court in operation: The legislation." Commonwealth Law Bulletin 11, no. 4 (October 1985): 1441–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03050718.1985.9985837.

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Cartwright, Silvia. "The New Zealand family court in operation: The legislation." Commonwealth Law Bulletin 12, no. 1 (January 1986): 239–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03050718.1986.9985851.

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Bridge, Caroline. "Conciliation and the New Zealand Family Court: lessons for English law reformers." Legal Studies 16, no. 3 (November 1996): 298–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-121x.1996.tb00532.x.

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Conciliation has formed an integral part of the New Zealand Family Court’s management of family disputes since 1980. The Family Court is a tiered structure, designed to encourage the parties to resolve their own disputes by providing opportunities for conciliation within a statutory process. The first two tiers, counselling and judicial mediation, are procedures intended to empower the parties, enable self-determination, and encourage a conciliatory rather than combative attitude towards both each other and the dispute. Consequently, the parties are compulsorily channelled through the conciliation tiers of the court even if the ultimate goal of one of them is a court room battle. The hope is that the third tier, adjudication by a Family Court judge in the Family Court, will be avoided.
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HIPGRAVE, TONY. "Conciliation and welfare services in the New Zealand Family Court." Children & Society 3, no. 4 (December 18, 2007): 332–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1099-0860.1989.tb00356.x.

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Tomas, Nin. "Recognizing Collective Cultural Property Rights in a Deceased—Clarke v. Takamore." International Journal of Cultural Property 20, no. 3 (August 2013): 333–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0940739113000155.

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AbstractThe recent New Zealand Supreme Court decision inClarke v Takamoreraises issues about how Maori society views deceased tribal members as belonging to the extended family and tribal group collective. This conflicts with English common law understandings that a closer, legally protected individual relationship exists with an executor, if the decedent has left a will, or with a spouse, if there is no will. This note examines the conflict and suggests a solution that would be fairer to Maori than that unanimously reached by three of New Zealand's general courts.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "New Zealand Family Court"

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Taylor, Nicola J., and n/a. "Care of children : families, dispute resolution and the Family Court." University of Otago. Children's Issues Centre, 2006. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20060810.120428.

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This study explored family members� experience of, and satisfaction with, New Zealand Family Court dispute resolution processes concerning children�s care arrangements following parental separation. A qualitative method was employed, using individual interviews with 22 parents and 8 children from 15 families, in three court districts, during 2001-2002. Follow-up interviews were also conducted with the parents one year later to assess the factors affecting compliance with their agreements and court orders. Focus groups were held with 16 Family Court professionals (lawyers, counsellors, specialist report writers and judges) in two cities to obtain their views on the family members� perspectives. Sociocultural and ecological theories, the sociology of childhood and the UNCRC provided the conceptual basis for the research. Historical developments in child custody and divorce laws, which provided the impetus for the establishment of Family Courts internationally, have also been reviewed. Each parent was legally represented, with 87% of the families also attending Family Court counselling and judge-led mediation conferences. Defended hearings occurred in 27% of the cases. Family members reported a broad range of views about their legal and court experiences. They valued their interactions with professionals who took an interest in them and their children, provided clear information and support, let them have their say, and competently managed the dispute resolution processes. Dissatisfaction was frequently expressed with the conduct of ex-partners and with professionals� styles of practice, particularly where these involved erratic or uncompromising attitudes and adversarial tactics. The desire to respond to what was written in an ex-partner�s affidavit escalated some parenting disputes onto a litigation pathway. Delay, cost, gender bias, lack of enforcement of court orders, and inadequate opportunities to feel heard, understood and respected were also identified as problems associated with Family Court proceedings. Earlier access to a wider range of information, support and conciliation services was recommended, together with more post-order explanation and support. The professionals wanted a stronger emphasis on the Family Court as a court of law, rather than a social agency. A clearer demarcation between the court�s conciliation and adjudication functions was considered necessary to avoid clients having unrealistic expectations of the Family Court. Family members� therapeutic needs were important, but thought best met within community-based agencies. The children were aware of their parents� court proceedings and most wanted the opportunity to play a more direct role in the decision about their future living arrangements. Significant or modest changes had occurred in 60% of the families by the time of their follow-up interviews. Some changes had led to a reversal in the original care arrangements, while others had impacted upon the frequency of a child�s contact with their non-resident parent. A new conceptual model for the resolution of post-separation parenting disputes has been developed. This integrates the theoretical framework underpinning the study with the international research evidence on the impact of parental separation and the principles and practices of an effective child-inclusive and culturally responsive family law system.
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Anderson, Vivienne, and n/a. "The experiences of international and New Zealand women in New Zealand higher education." University of Otago. Faculty of Education, 2009. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20090812.101334.

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This thesis reports on an ethnographic research project that explored the experiences and perspectives of a group of women in New Zealand higher education, including international and New Zealand students and partners of international students. The study had two aims. The first was to disrupt the inattention to gender and to students' partners and families in New Zealand international education research and policy. The second was to problematise Eurocentric assumptions of (predominantly Asian) international students' 'cultural difference', and of New Zealanders' homogenised sameness. The theoretical framework for the study was informed by a range of conceptual tools, including feminist, critical theory, post-structural, and postcolonial perspectives. In drawing on feminist perspectives, the study was driven by a concern with acknowledging the importance and value of women's lives, looking for women where they are absent from policy and analysis, and attending to the mechanisms through which some women's lives are rendered invisible in internationalised higher education. In considering these mechanisms and women's lives in relation to them the study also drew on post-structural notions of discourse, power, and agency. It explored how dominant discourses in internationalised higher education reveal and reproduce historically-grounded relations of power that are intentionally or unintentionally performed, subverted and/or resisted by women and those they encounter. Using Young's (1990, 2000) approach to critical theory, the study also considered alternative ways of constructing internationalised higher education that were suggested in women's accounts. As a critical feminist ethnography the study was shaped by my theoretical framework (above), critical literature on heterogeneous social groups, and feminist concerns with relationship, reciprocity and power in the research process. Fieldwork took place during 2005 and 2006 and involved two aspects: the establishment and maintenance of an intercultural group for women associated with a higher education institution, and 28 interviews with 20 women over two years. Interviewees were recruited through the group and included eight international students, nine New Zealand students and three women partners of international students. Study findings challenged the assumption that international and local students are distinct and oppositional groups. They also highlighted the importance of recognising the legitimate presence of international students' partners and accompanying family members at all levels in higher education. International and New Zealand women alike found the intercultural group a useful source of social and practical support and information, and a point of access to other sources of support and information. Women reflected on moving between many different kinds of living and learning contexts, highlighting the importance of: clear processes and pathways for accessing information and practical support when experiencing transition; teaching that is engaging, effective, and responsive; and opportunities to develop connections with other people both on and off campus. Rather than revealing clear patterns of difference or sameness across women, the study highlighted the importance of policy, research, teaching and support practices that are open and responsive to women's actual viewpoints and needs, and that neither re-entrench difference nor assume sameness.
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Todd, Amanda Claire. "Mating strategies and sperm competition in New Zealand geckos (Family Gekkonidae)." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Zoology, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1421.

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Most species of reptile studied to date have polygynandrous mating systems and possess specialised sperm storage regions. Consequently, there is a high potential for sperm competition in this group. Using comparative analyses, I examined the level of sperm competition in New Zealand geckos and how this has influenced the evolution of their reproductive morphology. Across lizards and snakes, there was more than a 40-fold variation in relative testis size. New Zealand geckos fell in the middle of this range and lacked sexual dimorphism in head size, suggesting that most species have polygynandrous mating systems. I confirmed this for one species, Hoplodactylus maculatus, which is gregarious, lacks territoriality and has a courtship pattern that suggests a high level of promiscuity for both sexes. I found that hemipenis size in New Zealand geckos was positively correlated with relative testis size, suggesting that sperm competition has resulted in the evolution of larger intromittent organs. However, the surface features of the hemipenis were relatively conservative across species. Although there was no relationship between sperm length or putative sperm storage site (SST) morphology and relative testis size, species with fewer SSTs, and thus more intense sperm competition, had longer sperm. H. maculatus males produced two types of sperm which differed not only in length but also in fertilising capacity, the short morph lacking DNA. This is the first known example of such sperm polymorphism in a vertebrate and may have evolved in response to sperm competition, the non-fertilising morph potentially helping to block the sperm of rival males or filling sperm storage sites. The motility of these short sperm was positively correlated with temperature; however, at higher temperatures motility declined with time, suggesting a trade-off between motility and longevity. Such temperature influences on male reproductive physiology have important implications for males of ectothermic species under sperm competition.
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Cross, Jennifer. "Policing family violence in Christchurch." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Sociology and Anthropology, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/908.

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Up until the 1980s, the police often reluctantly intervened in domestic disputes. However, from the mid 1980s onwards, the introduction of pro-arrest family violence policies throughout the U.S., the U.K., and New Zealand, signalled a significant shift in police practices. It was hoped that the adoption of these policies would help improve the police response to family violence, and it was anticipated that police behaviour would consequently change. Unfortunately, the implementation of these policies has been fraught with difficulties, and they have often not translated easily into practice, or resulted in the intended changes. The current study, which was conducted in Christchurch in 2004, sought to understand how a pro-arrest policy was implemented at the local level. Drawing on a symbolic interactionist approach, and utilising Lipksy's (1980) street-level bureaucracy theory, this research focuses on a number of issues, including the application of the pro-arrest policy at the street-level, and its associated problems, and the legitimate/illegitimate exercise of discretion. This study has found evidence of significant practical problems with the implementation of the pro-arrest policy, which are similar to those that have been reported overseas.
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Moynihan, Ann Marie. "Structural Violence in the New Hampshire Family Court System: An Autoethnographic Exploration." Diss., NSUWorks, 2018. https://nsuworks.nova.edu/shss_dcar_etd/88.

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The family law system effectuates case outcomes affecting the lives of parents, children, and society through court orders imposing important life decisions upon divorcing or unmarried parents, children, and post divorce families. While some cases are resolved in alternative dispute resolution forums, others enter the courtroom and judicial decisions cause unintended consequences for millions of adults and children each year. This research details a parent’s suboptimal family law system experience caused by judicial decision-making, highlighting the need to examine the causes of unintended systemic outcomes. The purpose of this research is to raise awareness and provide justification for systemic reform to prevent unintended consequences of court ordered outcomes caused by underlying structural violence. Conflicting objectives of litigants and problem solvers are investigated to determine the causes of systemic failures so recommendations for improved outcomes can be formulated. Theories of justice, civil rights, public policy, systems, structural violence, and nonviolence are integral components of this research. Applied theory in the context of the researcher’s experience highlights the need to address this social system issue while demonstrating the system intended to resolve disputes actually exacerbates conflict, resulting in more disputes. This research contributes to the literature because many litigants are unable to share their stories due to their oppressed condition within the system. This autoethnography documents the effects of a social system for conflict management gone awry and establishes a foundation to promote dialogue in support of a new way to manage disputes that is conducive to conflict resolution instead of conflict escalation.
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Whiting, Rosalind Heather, and n/a. "Gender, family responsibilities and career success in the New Zealand accountancy profession." University of Otago. Department of Accountancy and Business Law, 2007. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20070214.145101.

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This study contributes to an understanding of the causes, consequences and complexities of gender inequity in career success (high levels of status and salary) in the New Zealand accounting profession. Sixty-nine (twenty-seven male and forty-two female) experienced Chartered Accountants were interviewed about their career histories. A feminist, interpretative and qualitative approach was followed and NVIVO was used for analysis. The first significant contribution of the study was the identification of five work/family strategies based on levels of family and work involvement (Traditional Men, Traditional Women, Family Balancers, Stepping Stone Men and Work First Women). Secondly, the level of family responsibilities explained career success much better than gender alone, although these two factors were commonly (but not always) directly related. The third contribution was the revision of the three-pronged model previously offered by Whiting & Wright (2001) to explain gender inequities in salary and status in the New Zealand accounting profession. Because the original model was derived from quantitative data, using qualitative data to revise the model constituted a sequential mixed method (pragmatic) approach. In the revised model, gender centrality and the three explanatory categories (Attributes, Structure and Attitudes) were removed. Career success was enhanced by high career aspirations (related to perceptions of stress, managerial and responsibility requirements and remuneration), long working hours and availability to clients, hard work, high technical competence and skills (enhanced by overseas experience), networking (less attractive to women), self-confidence (enhanced by mentoring for the least self-confident), flexibility to relocate if required (decreased by family and lifestyle ties) and large size and growth of the employing organisation. Most influential were career aspirations and a long hours/available work ethic. This demonstrated the pervasiveness of the male linear career model (derived from the male breadwinner-female carer family structure), that rewarded (in terms of progression) unilateral allegiance to the firm. Career aspirations, desire for responsibility, perceived ability to handle pressure, long hours, availability to clients, networking and possibly technical skills (if there were periods of extended leave) were all influenced by the Chartered Accountant�s level of family responsibilities. Those with the least family responsibilities (childless, Traditional Men and Work First Women) demonstrated unswerving commitment to the firm and were equally the most successful career wise. The impact of family responsibilities on career progression could be ameliorated by organisational cultural change. There were some indications of cultural change, being most prevalent in public sector and educational organisations. Enhancing conditions included a culture of flexibility and a concurrent atmosphere of trust, a less competitive work culture, absence of constant overtime demands and on-call work, encouraging top management who worked positively to retain and foster top performers over a longer period, and high level part-time positions supported by well-trained subordinate teams. To achieve these conditions provides an imminent challenge to organisations which employ Chartered Accountants, because the profession is increasing its proportion of females, has a younger generation more interested in work-life balance, and is losing many of its members overseas.
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Hilton, Zoe. "Physiological adaptation in the radiation of New Zealand triplefin fishes (Family Tripterygiidae)." Thesis, University of Auckland, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/5902.

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Physiological adaptation to divergent environments is a poorly understood factor in adaptive radiation. New Zealand (NZ) triplefin fishes (Tripterygiidae) have undergone a radiation associated with habitat diversification within NZ's coastal waters, where 26 closely-related endemic species occur in overlapping but divergent habitats, partitioned by depth and exposure. By investigating the relationship between respiratory physiological traits and habitat in these fishes, this thesis examines whether there is evidence in this group to support two proposed criteria for adaptive radiation; phenotype-environment correlation and trait utility. Significant interspecific differences were observed in rates of oxygen consumption (VO2) and critical oxygen concentration (O2 crit) in 12 species of triplefin examined. O2 crit correlated with species' habitat depth, with intertidal species displaying greater hypoxia tolerance than subtidal species, thus demonstrating phenotype-environment correlation and trait utility in relation to hypoxia exposure. Interspecific differences in VO2 were significantly influenced by phylogeny, indicating a lack of strong environmental selection on VO2. However, there was some indication of lower VO2 in species occupying more exposed habitats. Mitochondrial respiration was also examined in three species; the intertidal species displayed higher cytochrome c oxidase activity and was able to maintain efficient oxidative phosphorylation at higher temperatures than the two subtidal species, further indicating phenotype-environment correlation and trait utility. Haemoglobin (Hb) isoform expression was examined in 23 species. Isoform multiplicity declined with habitat depth, supporting the hypothesis that higher multiplicity may be associated with greater environmental variability. A lack of phylogenetic signal in Hb expression, and latitudinal variation in the relative isoform abundance in some species, indicated potential selection on this trait. However, there was no pattern in expression of cathodal Hbs, and the trait utility of this multiplicity is unknown. Overall, there is strong evidence that differences between intertidal and subtidal environments in exposure to high temperatures and hypoxia may have lead to divergence in O2 crit and mitochondrial function between intertidal and subtidal species. Therefore physiological adaptation may have enabled the expansion of species into the more demanding habitats such as the intertidal zone. Hb isoform multiplicity and VO2 were correlated with habitat in both intertidal and subtidal species, however the trait utility associated with these correlations is unknown and thus there remains a lack of evidence to support a direct role of physiological adaptation in habitat divergence of subtidal species - and therefore for adaptive radiation of the group as a whole.
Whole document restricted until September 2011, but available by request, use the feedback form to request access. Please note some figures of the thesis have been previously published and are subject to copyright restrictions.
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Cornes, Richard. "Top court reform in the United Kingdom and New Zealand 1999-2011 : a participant perspective and critique." Thesis, University of Essex, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.571266.

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The nine pieces that comprise this submission for a doctorate of philosophy in law are concerned with the reform debates in the United Kingdom and New Zealand between 1999 and 2011, and which led during that period to both countries establishing new Supreme Courts. My interest in top court reform in both countries has not been though simply as an academic commentator: three of the pieces were prepared to engage directly with the policy debates concerned: a briefing to a Royal Commission on Reform of the House of Lords covering the role of the Law Lords; an options study of possible reform models co-authored with Andrew Le Sueur and funded by the ESRC; and a submission to the UK Parliament on the Constitutional Reform Bill. My concern has been, and continues to be, to offer the insights of academic study to ongoing reform debates, and also to bring into my academic writing a sense of the realities which may flow from engaging with the policy making process. To give a sense of ongoing perspective I also outline in a closing chapter my current and possible future research projects, all of which continue in the theme of top court studies in the United Kingdom and New Zealand.
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Brown, Margaret Mary Selman. "Genealogical Family History in Aotearoa-New Zealand: From Community of Practice to Transdisciplinary Academic Discourse?" The University of Waikato, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10289/2561.

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Genealogical Family Historians conduct research in order to reconstruct genealogical families, through the application of a rigorous methodology: weighing the evidence for placing each individual in a family group, linking family groups of the past and making contact with kin of the present. Genealogical Family Historians trace the movements and migrations of identified individuals and family groups; and study the local, national and international social settings of lives lived in families and households in different times and places, over many generations. A large worldwide Community of Practice with many constituent groups, including the New Zealand Society of Genealogists Incorporated, has formed itself around this research activity. In this transdisciplinary study focused on social learning, I have explored and analysed the domain, the practice and the community of Genealogical Family Historians researching in and from Aotearoa-New Zealand during the past 50 years. Genealogical Family Historians meet formally and informally, in small groups or at large conferences to pursue their self-directed learning. The collaborative practice includes publishing and teaching; and the locating, preserving and indexing of records. Many conduct research and communicate with others in the new world of cyberspace. My overarching research question has been: where is the future place for this scholarly discourse? My approach to this study is transdisciplinary: my point-of-view is above and across departments and disciplines. The ethos and vision of transdisciplinarity is attained only through existing disciplines, and transdisciplinary research has the potential to contribute to those disciplines, as I demonstrate in this thesis. The transdisciplinary scholarly discourse of Genealogical Family History owes much to the disciplines of history, geography and sociology; and draws on biology, law, religious studies, linguistics, demography, computer science and information technology. I have also drawn on understandings from my own prior and concurrent disciplinary knowledge and experience for this study. Other Genealogical Family Historians bring different disciplinary understandings to the discourse that is Genealogical Family History. My positionality is that of an insider, an involved member of the Community of Practice for many years. In this study, I have allowed my key informants to speak with their own voices; and I have sought illustration and evidence from documentation and observation in the wider Genealogical Family History Community, past and present. I have used enhanced reflection on my own practice in my analysis and in case studies. This study demonstrates how the Community of Practice has played an important role in developing a transdisciplinary mode of inquiry and suggests that there are some generic features of the field and practice of Genealogical Family History that form the substance of a transdisciplinary discourse ready to take its place in academia.
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Fee, Roderick Harold. "Sandcastles, and, The postmodern rules for family living a thesis submitted to Auckland University of Technology in partial fulfilment of the degree of Master of Creative Writing (MCW), 2008." Click here to access exegesis online, 2008. http://aut.researchgateway.ac.nz/handle/10292/770.

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Books on the topic "New Zealand Family Court"

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Yanagi, Akinobu. New Zealand. Milwaukee: G. Stevens Pub., 1987.

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Yanagi, Akinobu. New Zealand. Milwaukee: G. Stevens Pub., 1987.

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Gieseler, Rayna. Garsington: New Zealand family Radford. [Christ Church, N.Z: R. Gieseler, 1991.

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Webb, P. R. H. Family law in New Zealand. Wellington: LexisNexis NZ, 2009.

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Dewes, Kate. Aotearoa/New Zealand at the World Court. Christchurch, Aotearoa/N.Z: Disarmament and Security Centre, 1999.

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Neill, Mary. New Zealand family research directory, 1997. Auckland: New Zealand Society of Genealogists, 1997.

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Tracing family history in New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z: Godwit, 1996.

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Tracing family history in New Zealand. Wellington, N.Z: GP Books, 1988.

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Family names in Australia & New Zealand. Kenthurst, NSW: Kangaroo Press, 1990.

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Philson, Marianne. The Duder family in New Zealand. Auckland: Published by the Bush Press, Auckland, on behalf of the Duder Family 1990 Re-union Committee, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "New Zealand Family Court"

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Sanders, Jackie, and Robyn Munford. "Lessons from the Evaluation of Family Support in New Zealand." In Evaluating Family Support, 169–89. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/0470013362.ch9.

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Larner, Glenn. "Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy." In Encyclopedia of Couple and Family Therapy, 1–2. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15877-8_630-1.

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Larner, Glenn. "Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy." In Encyclopedia of Couple and Family Therapy, 191–92. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-49425-8_630.

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Kaiser, M. "Aquaculture and the precautionary principle in the New Zealand Supreme Court." In Know your food, 48–54. The Netherlands: Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3920/978-90-8686-813-1_6.

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Taylor, Nicola, and Megan Gollop. "Children’s Views and Participation in Family Dispute Resolution in New Zealand." In Enhancing Children's Rights, 242–55. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137386106_17.

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Schänzel, Heike A. "13. Motherhood within Family Tourism Research: Case Studies in New Zealand and Samoa." In Femininities in the Field, edited by Brooke A. Porter and Heike A. Schänzel, 185–99. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781845416515-016.

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Schänzel, Heike A. "13. Motherhood within Family Tourism Research: Case Studies in New Zealand and Samoa." In Femininities in the Field, edited by Brooke A. Porter and Heike A. Schänzel, 185–99. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781845416522-016.

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Borcsa, Maria, Jay L. Lebow, Reenee Singh, Glenn Larner, and Philip Messent. "Publication in Family Therapy Journals: Family Process, Journal of Family Therapy, and Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy – A Discussion with Editors." In Systemic Research in Individual, Couple, and Family Therapy and Counseling, 417–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-36560-8_23.

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Gharibi, Khadij, and Corinne Seals. "Family Language Policy towards Heritage Language Literacy Acquisition and Maintenance: Iranians in New Zealand." In The Sociolinguistics of Iran’s Languages at Home and Abroad, 109–39. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-19605-9_5.

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Harman, Kristyn. "‘Murder Will Out’: Intimacy, Violence, and the Snow Family in Early Colonial New Zealand." In Intimacies of Violence in the Settler Colony, 159–77. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76231-9_8.

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Conference papers on the topic "New Zealand Family Court"

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Drventić, Martina. "COVID-19 CHALLENGES TO THE CHILD ABDUCTION PROCEEDINGS." In EU 2021 – The future of the EU in and after the pandemic. Faculty of Law, Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.25234/eclic/18323.

Full text
Abstract:
While creating a new notion of everyday life, the COVID-19 pandemic also affects the resolution of cross-border family disputes, including the international child abduction cases. The return of an abducted child to the country of his or her habitual residence is challenged by travel restrictions, international border closures, quarantine measures, but also by closed courts or cancelled hearings. Those new circumstances that befell the whole world underline two issues considering child abduction proceedings. The first one considers access to justice in terms of a mere possibility of the applicant to initiate the return proceeding and, where the procedure is initiated, in terms of the manner of conducting the procedure. The legislation requires a quick initiation and a summary resolution of child abduction proceedings, which is crucial to ensuring the best interests and well-being of a child. This includes the obligation of the court to hear both the child and the applicant. Secondly, it is to be expected that COVID-19 will be used as a reason for child abduction and increasingly as justification for issuing non-return orders seen as a “grave risk” to the child under Article 13(1)(b) of the Child Abduction Convention. By analysing court practice from the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020 to March 2021, the research will investigate how the pandemic has affected child abduction proceedings in Croatia. Available national practice of other contracting states will also be examined. The aim of the research is to evaluate whether there were obstacles in accessing the national competent authorities and courts during the COVID-19 pandemic, and in which manner the courts conducted the proceedings and interpreted the existence of the pandemic in the context of the grave risk of harm exception. The analyses of Croatian and other national practices will be used to gain an overall insight into the effectiveness of the emerging guidance and suggest their possible broadening in COVID-19 circumstances or any other future crises.
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