Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « New Zealand Walkway Commission »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "New Zealand Walkway Commission"

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Lakeman, Enid. « New Zealand royal commission ». Representation 26, no 101 (décembre 1986) : 9–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03115518608619436.

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November, Janet. « New Zealand : The New Zealand Law Commission – A New Direction ». Commonwealth Law Bulletin 34, no 3 (septembre 2008) : 693–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03050710802268984.

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Wallace, Justice. « The New Zealand Human Rights Commission ». Nordic Journal of International Law 58, no 2 (1989) : 155–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157181089x00028.

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McGeorge, A. P. « Mental health in New Zealand ». International Psychiatry 5, no 1 (janvier 2008) : 12–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s1749367600005415.

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New Zealand's healthcare system has undergone significant changes in recent times, among them being the establishment in 1993 of a purchaser/provider split and the specific attention given to the development of mental health services. Funding for mental health services (Fig. 1) increased from NZ$270 million in 1993/94 to NZ$866.6 million per annum in 2004/05, a real increase (adjusted for inflation) of 154% (Mental Health Commission, 2006). The bi-partisan political commitment sustaining this funding has had a major impact on the development of recovery-based and culturally specific models of care unrivalled by few countries in the world. However, recent reports (Mental Health Commission, 2006) indicate that, particularly with regard to access, much still remains to be done to address the mental health needs of New Zealanders.
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Stewart, D. P. C., et K. C. Cameron. « Effect of trampling on the soils of the St James Walkway, New Zealand ». Soil Use and Management 8, no 1 (mars 1992) : 30–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-2743.1992.tb00889.x.

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Editor. « Notes on earthquake insurance in California and New Zealand ». Bulletin of the New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering 19, no 4 (31 décembre 1986) : 251–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.5459/bnzsee.19.4.251-254.

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On the initiative of the Earthquake and War Damage Commission a team was organised to study the recovery from the earthquake which devastated Mexico City on 19 September 1985. Earthquake preparedness and underwriting in California was also researched. There were five members in the team and they were – Mr. Milton Allwood, Secretary of the Earthquake and War Damage Commission; Mr. Derek Scott, representing the Insurance Council of New Zealand; Mr. Ken Grieve, representing the Institute of Loss Adjusters of New Zealand (Inc); Mr. Edward Latter, National Director of Civil Defence; Mr. Don Currie, representing the Accident Compensation Corporation. The following extract on earthquake insurance is taken from one of the reports by the team.
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Editor. « Changes to disaster insurance in New Zealand ». Bulletin of the New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering 26, no 4 (31 décembre 1993) : 437–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5459/bnzsee.26.4.437-444.

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This article is based on material supplied by EQC in its information kit detailing the background to and consequences of the Earthquake Act 1993. After discussing the need for a change in insuring for disasters, the new natural disaster insurance for residential properties - EQCover - is outlined. This is followed by an outline of the phase-out of EQC cover for disaster insurance for commercial and "Special Purpose" properties. The new structure for and role of the Earthquake Commission is also outlined.
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Dong Suk Oh. « The Role of the Human Rights Commission in New Zealand ». Journal of hongik law review 10, no 3 (octobre 2009) : 99–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.16960/jhlr.10.3.200910.99.

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McKenzie, Peter. « The Compensation Scheme No One Asked For : The Origins of ACC in New Zealand ». Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 34, no 2 (2 juin 2003) : 193. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v34i2.5783.

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The vision laid down in the 1967 Royal Commission Report was radical in scope and quickly became controversial. Led by its Chairman, Sir Owen Woodhouse, the Commission presented a series of connected principles to support that vision, drawing from earlier critiques of the common law system in New Zealand and abroad. This paper explores the legal background in New Zealand prior to the Woodhouse Report and reviews prior movement toward reform, including submissions made by members of the Victoria University Law Faculty. It also describes opposition to the Report from members of the bar and other interest groups, but suggests reasons why the Woodhouse framework was nonetheless able to prevail.
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English, Bill. « The Tertiary Education Advisory Commission (TEAC) reforms ». Journal of Management & ; Organization 12, no 1 (juin 2006) : 68–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1833367200004168.

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In this article Bill English, New Zealand's Shadow Minister for Education, tells the story of New Zealand's tertiary education policy development over the past several years. His perspective comes from time in government and from time in opposition. He concludes with the lessons to be learnt, and his prognosis of the main issues to be confronted by that tertiary sector, in the years to come. The lessons to be learnt are just as valuable for the Australian sector as they are for New Zealand academicians.In this article, Polytechnics are the equivalent of the old Colleges of Advanced Education in Australia, or roughly between the TAFE and university sectors. MMP (mixed member proportional) is the proportional system of electing the New Zealand Parliament. This system is similar to the method by which Australians elect their federal Senate. A Wananga is a tertiary institution set up by statute to focus on the educational needs of Maori.
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Thèses sur le sujet "New Zealand Walkway Commission"

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Scott, David John 1946. « The Currie Commission and Report on Education in New Zealand 1960-1962 ». Thesis, University of Auckland, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/2292/2283.

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This thesis investigates and analyses the Report of the Commission on Education in New Zealand,1962, also known as the 'Currie Report', paying particular attention to the policy process surrounding the written and oral submissions. Views expressed during the submissions and their ideological basis are related to wider power relationships within society. The submissions emanating from outside the Department of Education are revisited as well as the departmental submissions to establish whether there are any grounds to challenge the consensual, liberal interpretations that have been attached to this important New Zealand historical educational document. The issues raised and avoided in the submissions coalesce around specific themes, which are related to the broader issues of the development of New Zealand educational history. Attempts to counteract, mute and marginalise dissent and to encourage optimal social control are witnessed in the organizational structure of the commission and in its methods. The interaction and networking of key participants is studied and the important inter-relationship between central bureaucratic interventions and powerful educational pressure group activity points to the continuing operational success of central government processes. The often competing forces of provincialism and centralism in New Zealand education underlie many of the conflicts surrounding educational change. Religion, race, gender and class are forces that continually interact to create legitimation crises. The governmental attempt to minimise or at least rationalize these socially contested differences in education from 1960-1962 is the subject of this thesis. An analysis is made of the process by which public dissatisfaction regarding education in the fifties and sixties was mediated and largely marginalised by the educational bureaucracy. This is done by a thorough examination of the interaction of pressure groups, unions, media and governmental agencies during the two year submissions to the Commission on Education 1962. The distinction between the commission's report and the submissions and interrogations leading up to the report is important, as the primary data extracted from the primary resource material in the submissions, at times, contradicts the departmental view as expressed in the report itself. In this way it is hoped to move beyond the rhetoric that informs previous commentaries and move closer to an interpretation based upon the primary data.
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Kontour, Kyle, et n/a. « Making culture or making culture possible : notions of biculturalism in New Zealand 1980s cinema and the role of the New Zealand Film Commission ». University of Otago. Department of Communication Studies, 2002. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20070508.140943.

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In the 1970s and 1980s New Zealand experienced significant socio-economic upheaval due in part to the global economy, economic experiments, and the gains of Maori activism. Despite the divisiveness of this period (or possibly because of it), anxieties over notions of New Zealand national identity were heightened. There was a general feeling among many Kiwis that New Zealand culture (however it was defined) was in danger of extinction, mostly due to the dominant influences of the United states and Britain. New Zealanders sought ways to distinguish themselves and their nation. One of the ways in which this desire was manifested was in the establishment of the New Zealand Film Commission (NZFC). This government sponsored body corporate was designed to provide an infrastructure for New Zealand filmmaking, through which New Zealand and New Zealanders could be represented. As a result, New Zealand filmmaking boomed during the early to mid-1980s. Significantly, this boom occurred simultaneous to the increasing relevance and importance of notions of biculturalism, both in cultural and socio-political terms. The question that drives this thesis is how (or whether) biculturalism was articulated in the explicit or implicit relationships between cultural debates, governmental policies, the NZFC�s own policies and practices and its interaction with filmmakers. This thesis examines the ways in which aspects of the discourse of biculturalism feature in New Zealand cinema of the 1980s in terms of the content, development, production and marketing of three films of this era that share particular bicultural themes and elements: Utu (Geoff Murphy, 1983), The Quiet Earth (Geoff Murphy, 1985) and Arriving Tuesday (Richard Riddiford, 1986). This thesis also examines the role of the NZFC in these processes as prescribed by legislation and in terms of the NZFC�s own policies and procedures. This thesis consults a variety of primary and secondary sources in its research. Primary sources include film texts, public documents, archival material, trade journals, and interviews with important figures in the New Zealand film industry. Conclusions suggest that the interaction of numerous socio-historical factors, and the practices and policies of the NZFC, denote a process that was not direct in its articulation of notions of biculturalism. Rather, this involved an array of complex cultural, fiscal. industrial, professional and aesthetic forces.
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Birdling, Malcolm David. « Correction of miscarriages of justice in New Zealand and England ». Thesis, University of Oxford, 2012. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:2dae4513-4fd2-40cd-bb6a-dbba696d6d7f.

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This thesis sets out to provide a deep analysis of the mechanisms for review of convictions in New Zealand and England after initial appeal rights are exhausted, and to identify the key areas of similarity and difference between these systems, the reasons for these differences, and their implications. The appeal systems in each jurisdiction are briefly examined, alongside the pressures and restrictions on their functioning. Particular attention is paid to the options for appeal out of time, and for revisiting appeal decisions if new material comes to light. The main discussion is of the specialist procedures for review of suspect convictions in each jurisdiction: the Royal Prerogative of Mercy process carried out by the New Zealand Ministry of Justice and the work of the English Criminal Cases Review Commission. This discussion presents the results of empirical research carried out by the author utilising the files of each of these bodies. It investigates the legal context in which each body functions, and provides an account of how each body functions in practice, by examining the circumstances in which each body will contemplate referring a matter back to an appeal court and the means by which a determination is made as to whether to do so in an individual case. In addition it examines the various factors (legal and non-legal) which impact on their work. Finally, the key features of the two systems are contrasted, with a discussion of the areas of similarity and difference, as well as the possible implications of these, in particular for reform of the New Zealand processes.
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Deerness-Plesner, Gina Eleanor Mary. « The Final Frontier ? New Zealand engagement with the European Union in the field of research, science and technology ». Thesis, University of Canterbury. National Centre for Research on Europe, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2697.

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This dissertation endeavours to address an identified gap in literature concerning the relationship between New Zealand and the European Union (EU) in the field of research, science and technology (RS&T). Examination of the partnership begins with the creation of the Science and Technological Cooperation (STC) Arrangement in 1991 and comes to a close in 2008, following the Arrangement’s ‘upgrade’ to an STC Agreement on 16 July. During this time, the intensification of the EU’s activities in RS&T is evident. The Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) currently constitutes the most internationalised Programme to date. Identifying the complementary nature of New Zealand and EU research priorities thus suggests that now, more than ever, the New Zealand research community stands to gain from participation within such an inclusive venture. Aiming to assess the current status of New Zealand-EU research collaboration, the research identifies a number of recurring themes, both positive and negative, that influence the nature of the RS&T relationship. These themes focus on problems concerning visibility within the EU, geographical isolation from this important market, an absence of targeted domestic funding for New Zealand-EU RS&T collaboration and the unwieldy bureaucratic process of the Framework Programme. The research also determines the importance of both ‘official’ and ‘informal’ mechanisms’ in combating the outlined collaborative bottlenecks. Taking these themes into account, the thesis ultimately looks to provide recommendations concerning the future of New Zealand-EU engagement in this field.
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Hall, Charlotta. « Sanningskommission för Sveriges samer : en studie om förväntningar och andra urfolks erfarenheter på väg mot upprättelse ». Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Teologiska institutionen, 2016. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-305672.

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In recent years the field of reparations for indigenous peoples has increased remarkably. Past wrongs made by states in the distant past has become more important to highlight, not only because of the memories of historical injustice, but because of how the past impacts the future, and not least, still appears as structures of discrimination remaining from the past.   As an indigenous people the Saami people living in Sweden have experiences of both historical injustices as well as todays struggle with discrimination on different levels. Mostly regarding their right to be a part of decisions concerning them and the right of culture, language, identity, land and nature resources, fundamental for them as a people. In order to change their situation and to search for redress the Saami people in Sweden have announced their need of a truth commission. The Saami people are not the first indigenous people whom search for redress through a truth commission, but is it possible to learn from others?   With this in mind, my study aim to look at practical experiences of truth commissions in Canada and New Zealand and further, examine what the Saami people in Sweden hope to achieve with a truth commission. Thereafter, I weight other indigenous peoples experiences of a truth commission with the Saami peoples expectations to find out what keys need to be considered to increase the outcome of a truth commission. Where theory, practical experience and Saami expectations connects is where the key issues can be found. Given this, my study suggests that five different key issues must be thought through and shall not be underestimated as they may have an effect on the ongoing process as well as on the results and the aftermaths. The key issues that is suggested is as follows: 1) political will, 2) the role and engagement of Civil Society, 3) the Saami´s own involvement 4) the problem of what focus the commission should have, and 5) the awareness of “tough” questions coming up.
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Livres sur le sujet "New Zealand Walkway Commission"

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Hillary Commission for Recreation and Sport. Life in New Zealand : Commission report. Wellington, N.Z : Hillary Commission for Recreation and Sport in association with the School of Physical Education, University of Otago., 1991.

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Hillary Commission for Recreation and Sport. Life in New Zealand : Commission report. Wellington, N.Z : Hillary Commission for Recreation and Sport in association with the School of Physical Education, University of Otago., 1991.

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G, Russell David, Wilson Noela, Hopkins Will, University of Otago et New Zealand. Hillary Commission for Recreation and Sport., dir. Life in New Zealand : Commission report. Wellington, N.Z : Hillary Commission for Recreation and Sport, 1991.

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New Zealand. Ministry of Economic Development. Review of the functions of the Securities Commission and Takeovers Panel : Discussion document. Wellington, N.Z. ] : Ministry of Economic Development, 2001.

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San Francisco (Calif.). Office of the Controller. City Services Auditor Division. Airport Commission : Concession audit of Air New Zealand Limited. San Francisco : Office of the Controller, 2008.

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Lewis, A. G. Final report on liquidation of Waterfront Industry Commission for the year ended 30 September 1992 : Presented to the House of Representatives pursuant to Section 28 of the Waterfront Industry Reform Act 1989. Wellington, N.Z : House of Representatives, 1992.

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Office, New Zealand Audit. The State Services Commission : Capability to recognise and address issues for Māori. Wellington [N.Z.] : Audit Office, 2004.

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Bruce, Bulloch, et Manaaki Whenua-Landcare Research New Zealand Ltd., dir. A potential for growth : Presentations at the meeting to reactivate the New Zealand National Poplar Commission, 24 February 1993, Aokautere, New Zealand. Lincoln, New Zealand : Manaaki Whenua-Landcare Research New Zealand Ltd, 1993.

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Parr, Arnold R. Insurance and natural disasters : An examination of the New Zealand Earthquake and War Damage Commission. [Boulder, Colo.] : Natural Hazards Research and Applications Information Center, 1994.

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New Zealand. Office of the Auditor-General. Earthquake Commission : Managing the Canterbury Home Repair Programme. Wellington : Office of the Auditor-General, 2013.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "New Zealand Walkway Commission"

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Seibel, Wolfgang. « Erosion of Professional Integrity : The Collapse of the Canterbury TV Building in Christchurch on 22 February 2011 ». Dans Collapsing Structures and Public Mismanagement, 87–128. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-67818-0_4.

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AbstractFrom 4 September 2010 on, a series of earthquakes shattered New Zealand for more than one year the most devastating of which caused the Canterbury TV (CTV) building in downtown Christchurch to collapse on 22 February 2011. One hundred and fifteen people were killed. A Royal Commission found out that, in 1986, the Christchurch City Council (CCC) had granted a building permit despite concerns about structural design issues. Moreover, the authority did not insist on structural analyses of the building after the initial earthquake of 4 September 2010. Thorough investigations after the disaster of 22 February 2011 revealed that the early concerns about insufficient joints between floors and shear walls had been entirely justified since the failure of the joints, according to all likelihood, had triggered the collapse of the building.
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« Electoral Commission New Zealand ». Dans The Grants Register 2018, 307. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-94186-5_432.

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« Electoral Commission New Zealand ». Dans The Grants Register 2023, 438. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-96053-8_4213.

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« Electoral Commission New Zealand ». Dans The Grants Register 2020, 321. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95943-3_330.

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« Electoral Commission New Zealand ». Dans The Grants Register 2021, 350–51. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95988-4_341.

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« Electoral Commission New Zealand ». Dans The Grants Register 2022, 383. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-96042-2_4211.

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« Electoral Commission New Zealand ». Dans The Grants Register 2024, 481. London : Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-96073-6_4213.

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Jackson, Keith, et Alan Mcrobie. « The Royal Commission : Recommendations and Consequences ». Dans New Zealand Adopts Proportional Representation, 95–124. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429399695-5.

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Luty, Sue, et Dawn Nolan. « Interpersonal Psychotherapy in New Zealand ». Dans Interpersonal Psychotherapy, 335–40. Oxford University PressNew York, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197652084.003.0041.

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Abstract EThis chapter discusses interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) in New Zealand. New Zealand has both private and publicly funded health services, with the majority of healthcare accessed through the public sector. The Health and Disability Commission NZ (HDCNZ) reported that 1 in 5 New Zealanders experience mental health issues, increasing to almost 1 in 3 for Maori, with the most prevalent disorders being mood disorders, anxiety, mental distress, eating disorders, addictions, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and schizophrenia. This means there is an ever-increasing need to provide effective and efficient mental health services, including evidenced-based talking therapies. IPT research and training initially developed at the Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, in the South Island of New Zealand under the leadership of Professor Peter Joyce in the mid-1990s after Professor Chris Fairburn ran a training workshop. Since then, there have been a number of successful studies that have used IPT and adaptations of IPT and interpersonal social rhythm therapy (IPSRT) to inform clinical practice. The chapter then considers a cultural adaptation of IPT for Māori, the indigenous culture of New Zealand.
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« No. 45092. New Zealand and Commission of the European Communities ». Dans Treaty Series 2524, 19–25. UN, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.18356/359c7f23-en-fr.

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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "New Zealand Walkway Commission"

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Telford, Elsie, Akari Nakai Kidd et Ursula de Jong. « Beyond the 1968 Battle between Housing Commission, Victoria, and the Residential Associations : Uncovering the Ultra Positions of Melbourne Social Housing ». Dans The 38th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. online : SAHANZ, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55939/a4022pplql.

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In 1968, the Housing Commission, Victoria, built a series of high-rise towers in response to an identified metropolitan planning issue: urban sprawl and the outward growth of metropolitan Melbourne. This “solution” precipitated a crisis in urban identity. The construction of the first of a series of these modern high-rise towers at Debney Park Estate, Carlton and Park Towers, South Melbourne displaced significant immigrant communities. This became the impetus for the formation of Residential Associations who perceived this project a major threat to existing cultural values pertaining to social and built heritage. This paper examines the extremely polarising events and the positions of both the Housing Commission and the Residential Associations over the course of fifteen years from 1968. The research is grounded in an historical review of government papers and statements surrounding the social housing towers, as well as scholarly articles, including information gathered by Renate Howe and the Urban Activists Project (UAP, 2003-2004). The historical review contextualises the dramatically vocal and well-publicised positions of the Residential Associations and the Housing Commission by reference to the wider social circumstances and the views of displaced community groups. Looking beyond the drama of the heated debate sparked by this crisis, the paper exposes nuances within the positions, investigates the specifics of the lesser known opinions of displaced residents and seeks to re-evaluate the influence of the towers on the establishment of an inner urban community identity.
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Rapports d'organisations sur le sujet "New Zealand Walkway Commission"

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Elliot, Sue, et David Haigh. Nothing Stands By Itself : Advocacy in the New Zealand Not-For-Profit Sector. Unitec ePress, octobre 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.34074/rsrp.22012.

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This research focuses on the nature of Government/Not for Profit (NFP) sector relationships with particular reference to advocacy in New Zealand. It follows up on a study of advocacy in NSW and Queensland carried by Onyx et al. (2009). There has been concern that NFP organisations in NZ have had their advocacy functions curtailed by the requirements of government contracting and by decisions from the Charities Commission. This study looks at the kinds of advocacy activities that NFP sector organisations are involved in, the language they use to describe their advocacy and the reasons given for the strategies NFPs adopt. The study shows that advocacy has not slowed down, the methods are evolving and NFPs are finding new ways to get their message across in a rapidly changing context.
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Elliot, Sue, et David Haigh. Nothing Stands By Itself : Advocacy in the New Zealand Not-For-Profit Sector. Unitec ePress, octobre 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.34074/rsrp.22012.

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This research focuses on the nature of Government/Not for Profit (NFP) sector relationships with particular reference to advocacy in New Zealand. It follows up on a study of advocacy in NSW and Queensland carried by Onyx et al. (2009). There has been concern that NFP organisations in NZ have had their advocacy functions curtailed by the requirements of government contracting and by decisions from the Charities Commission. This study looks at the kinds of advocacy activities that NFP sector organisations are involved in, the language they use to describe their advocacy and the reasons given for the strategies NFPs adopt. The study shows that advocacy has not slowed down, the methods are evolving and NFPs are finding new ways to get their message across in a rapidly changing context.
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