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1

Stewart, John. « William Beveridge in New Zealand : Social Security and World Security ». Canadian Journal of History 50, no 2 (janvier 2015) : 262–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.50.2.262.

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Stewart, John. « William Beveridge in New Zealand : Social Security and World Security ». Canadian Journal of History 50, no 2 (septembre 2015) : 262–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.ach.50.2.262.

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Sautter, Udo, et Raymond Richards. « Closing the Door to Destitution : The Shaping of the Social Security Acts of the United States and New Zealand. » Journal of American History 82, no 1 (juin 1995) : 326. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2082110.

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Achenbaum, W. Andrew, et Raymond Richards. « Closing the Door to Destitution : The Shaping of the Social Security Acts of the United States and New Zealand. » Journal of American History 83, no 2 (septembre 1996) : 666. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2945048.

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Achenbaum, W. Andrew, et Raymond Richards. « Closing the Door to Destitution : The Shaping of the Social Security Acts of the United States and New Zealand. » Journal of American History 82, no 4 (mars 1996) : 1627. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2945413.

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Castles, Francis G., et Raymond Richards. « Closing the Door to Destitution : The Shaping of the Social Security Acts of the United States and New Zealand. » American Historical Review 100, no 5 (décembre 1995) : 1532. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2169889.

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Carter, Kristie N., Kerri Kruse, Tony Blakely et Sunny Collings. « The association of food security with psychological distress in New Zealand and any gender differences ». Social Science & ; Medicine 72, no 9 (mai 2011) : 1463–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.03.009.

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Bennett, James. « Social Security, the “Money Power” and the Great Depression : The International Dimension to Australian and New Zealand Labour in Office ». Australian Journal of Politics & ; History 43, no 3 (28 juin 2008) : 312–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.1997.tb01393.x.

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Mein Smith, Philippa. « Book Review : Margaret McClure, A Civilised Community : A History of Social Security in New Zealand 1898-1998 (Auckland : Auckland University Press, 1998), pp. viii, 308, $39.95 ». Political Science 51, no 2 (décembre 1999) : 189–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003231879905100208.

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Cheng, Manqing. « Towards a Carbon-Neutral State : International Progress, National Risks, and Coping Strategies ». International Journal of Scientific Research and Management 9, no 10 (26 octobre 2021) : 790–802. http://dx.doi.org/10.18535/ijsrm/v9i10.sh03.

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Climate change is a major social, economic and environmental challenge facing all countries in the world today. It has increasingly become a priority on the agenda of international relations. This article outlines major developments in international climate action during and after the pandemic. The article identifies the global trends of carbon action on the countries’ agendas for sustainable development in the near future, including accelerate the implementation of mature zero-carbon solutions and promote zero-carbon technology. It then presents risks in tackling the global climate crisis collectively confronted by the international community at present, such as economic slowdown, energy security, carbon financing, price inflation, carbon barrier, carbon trading and carbon debt. With these common dilemmas in mind, the article sums up by proposing multiple possible directions towards reducing emissions and putting forward some community strategies for New Zealand to implement. These include promote the electrification of transportation and establish green infrastructure, consumption, financial, technology and industrial systems. This article aims to inform on the debate about current challenges in building a sustainable and resilient carbon-neutral state in the wake of global public crisis by analyzing global developing trends in addressing climate change, as well as to provoke thinking on potential options for government to enable net zero carbon and new energy future.
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Ernst, Daniel. « Raymond Richards, Closing the Door to Destitution : The Shaping of the Social Security Acts of the United States and New Zealand, University Park : Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994. Pp. xxx + 178. $42.50 (ISBN 0-271-01061-6). » Law and History Review 14, no 2 (1996) : 409–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/743805.

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Gratton, Brian. « Closing the Door to Destitution : The Shaping of the Social Security Acts of the United States and New Zealand. By Raymond Richards. University Park, PA : The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994. Pp. xxx, 178. $42.50. » Journal of Economic History 55, no 1 (mars 1995) : 207–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700040997.

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Palmer, Geoffrey. « A Retrospective on the Woodhouse Report : The Vision, the Performance and the Future ». Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 50, no 2 (2 septembre 2019) : 401. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v50i2.5753.

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The following is a revised version of the second Woodhouse Memorial Lecture given at both the Victoria University of Wellington and the University of Auckland in September 2018. It traces the history and policy iterations of New Zealand's accident compensation scheme that flowed from the 1967 Woodhouse Report (the Report), a Royal Commission report chaired by Sir Owen Woodhouse. It discusses the features of the Report and the determination it showed to get rid of the common law action for damages for personal injury. It analyses the degree to which the Report was not followed in the journey it took through the political decision-making system. There is a critical analysis of the delivery of benefits, the administration of the scheme and its financing. The performance in accident prevention and rehabilitation is briefly covered. The method of settling disputes in the scheme has seen an unwelcome return to legalism. The lecture concludes with a strong plea to remove the anomalies created by the accident compensation scheme between the vicitims of accident who receive earnings related-benefit and those who are dealt with under the Social Security Act 2018 under which they receive flat rate benefits. The lecture concludes with some lessons for policymakers.
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RICE, G. W. « SOCIAL HISTORY OF MEDICINE IN NEW ZEALAND ». Social History of Medicine 1, no 3 (1988) : 409–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/shm/1.3.409.

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Mann, Kirk. « Poverty, policy and the state : Social security reform in New Zealand ». Benefits : A Journal of Poverty and Social Justice 17, no 1 (février 2009) : 91–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.51952/nsle6764.

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Mitchell, Deborah. « Participation and opportunity : Redefining social security in Australia and New Zealand ». International Social Security Review 55, no 4 (janvier 2002) : 127–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-246x.00142.

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Bryder, Linda, et John Stewart. « ‘Some Abstract Socialistic Ideal or Principle’ : British Reactions to New Zealand's 1938 Social Security Act ». Britain and the World 8, no 1 (mars 2015) : 51–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/brw.2015.0167.

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This article, utilising British and New Zealand primary sources, examines the impact of New Zealand's 1938 Social Security Act on British health care reform. The Act, brought in by the Dominion's first Labour government, sought to socialize health care. It was opposed by most New Zealand and British doctors, organised by the British Medical Association in both countries; but supported by the political left in both New Zealand and Britain. This episode is neglected in the historiography of Britain's National Health Service but what happened in New Zealand significantly shaped British thinking about health care reform in the late 1930s and 1940s.
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O’Brien, Michael. « Social Investment in Aotearoa/New Zealand : Meaning and Implications ». Social Sciences 9, no 7 (30 juin 2020) : 111. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci9070111.

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Social investment has been the leit motif for the development of a range of social service provisions in Aotearoa/New Zealand for the last decade. It involves a particular approach, using data to target decisions and inform directions for such key areas as social security, care and protection of children and delivery of social services. There are serious questions about the statistical base which informs the approach and the implications for disadvantaged, marginalised and targeted populations, while poverty is neglected, sidelined and/or treated as resulting from individual failure. The Aotearoa/New Zealand model of social investment represents a significant departure from needs based, equity informed welfare provision.
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Thi Hong Thai, Duong, et Dr Hong Hanh Bui. « China – New Zealand Relations After the Cold War : Implications for New Zealand ‘S Foreign Policy ». International Journal of Arts, Humanities & ; Social Science 04, no 06 (13 juin 2023) : 33–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.56734/ijahss.v4n6a5.

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Since the Cold War, the China – New Zealand relations have made great progress. New Zealand’s multiple connections with China are more diverse than at any other time in the history. This article explores the relations between the two countries since the Cold War. In the context of the rise of China in the Asia-Pacific region, this examination is critical and has implications for New Zealand to pride itself on maintaining an independent foreign policy to protect its own sovereign interests while balancing economic security and maintaining a productive and respectful relationship with a great power like China.
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Saunders, Peter. « Social Security in Australia and New Zealand : Means-tested or Just Mean ? » Social Policy and Administration 33, no 5 (décembre 1999) : 493–515. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9515.00167.

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Sawir, Erlenawati, Simon Marginson, Chris Nyland, Gaby Ramia et Felicity Rawlings-Sanaei. « The Social and Economic Security of International Students : A New Zealand Study ». Higher Education Policy 22, no 4 (12 novembre 2009) : 461–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/hep.2009.4.

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Maskovsky, Jeff. « Anti-social security ». Focaal 2019, no 84 (1 juillet 2019) : 120–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/fcl.2019.840110.

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Gavin Smith’s (2014) Intellectuals and (Counter-) Politics is a tour de force. It calls for anthropology to attend more carefully to the history of moves by the dominant capitalist blocs to enhance the conditions for their own reproduction and to the ways in which different subordinated and subaltern groups respond to these moves. This is, of course, a well-established line of inquiry. Yet, in Intellectuals, Smith breathes new life into an intellectual project that has been sidelined in recent years, as other preoccupations take hold in the discipline of anthropology and beyond. Smith rethinks what is meant by realist history, arming a new generation of insurgent scholars, readers, and activists, inside and outside the academy with a new set of intellectual priorities. The book thus exemplifies the best kind of politicized writing in anthropology and in other disciplines.
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Zdencanovic, Ben. « “Based upon New Principles” ». Radical History Review 2021, no 139 (1 janvier 2021) : 103–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01636545-8822627.

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AbstractThis essay examines the early life and work of the Russian American social reformer Abraham Epstein, an advocate for old-age pensions and compulsory social insurance whose work as head of the American Association for Social Security helped lead to the passage of the 1935 Social Security Act. The essay traces a young Epstein’s 1921–22 journey to Russia to study the Soviet government’s radical experiments in social welfare policy. Although Epstein was disillusioned with the Soviet system on the whole, his experiences in Soviet Russia informed his later idea of “social security”: a unified system of social insurance and social assistance to protect the entire population from social risk while functioning as a powerful tool of income redistribution. Epstein’s early interest in Soviet social welfarism adds new insight into the development of the broader concept of “social security,” an important but understudied link between Progressive Era “workingmen’s insurance” and the postwar welfare state.
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Humpage, Louise, et Simone Baillie. « Workfare : conditioning the attitudes of benefit recipients towards social security ? » Journal of International and Comparative Social Policy 32, no 1 (février 2016) : 17–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21699763.2015.1131731.

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Have increasing levels of conditionality fundamentally changed the attitudes of the unemployed towards social security, work obligations and welfare dependency? Both neopaternalist and governmentalist theorising suggests that workfare policies should have shifted this group's conceptions of self-interest over time yet previous evidence has been rather mixed. This article makes a fresh contribution to the literature by drawing upon New Zealand Election Study data (1990–2014) and New Zealand qualitative data (2007–2008; 2014) to analyse the attitudes of “undeserving” unemployed benefit recipients who are subject to work obligations over 21 years and by comparing their attitudes to those of “deserving” benefit recipients not subject to work obligations (the retired and students) and wage/salary earners. It finds a notable hardening of unemployed people's attitudes towards some welfare dependency propositions over time and evidence of “self-governing rationalities” being adopted by some unemployed individuals but, overall, attitudes amongst this group remain nuanced and ambivalent.
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Loughlin, Suzanne. « Towards a critical discourse analysis of New Zealand security policy in Afghanistan ». Kōtuitui : New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online 13, no 2 (3 juillet 2018) : 271–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1177083x.2018.1491409.

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Lineham, Peter J. « Trends in Religious History in New Zealand : From Institutional to Social History ». History Compass 12, no 4 (avril 2014) : 333–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12152.

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Southcombe, Mark. « Re-socialising Aotearoa New Zealand Housing ». Counterfutures 9 (7 mars 2021) : 47–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/cf.v9.6774.

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Urban housing in Aotearoa New Zealand is predominantly unit-titled, individualised dwellings whether the housing is owner-occupied or a rental investment. As housing increases in density, the provision and management of common space becomes necessary. In Aotearoa New Zealand, when this occurs, the extent of privately owned housing space is typically privileged, and shared common space minimised. In contrast, cooperative housing integrates housing, economic factors, and social contexts to create long-term socially and economically sustainable housing. Since the 19th century, cooperative housing has provided evidence of internationally awarded and recognised, self-help, community-generated housing that includes shared components. Cooperative housing offers a third way of achieving affordable housing security, one that lies between home ownership and renting. Legislatively mandated and protected cooperative housing is needed in Aotearoa New Zealand to augment our existing housing production systems and types, and to help address the need for enduring, affordable, and socially sustainable housing.
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Gillespie, Alexander, et Claire Breen. « The Security Intelligence Agencies in New Zealand : evolution, challenges and progress ». Intelligence and National Security 36, no 5 (23 mars 2021) : 676–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2021.1901409.

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Parsons, Jill, Aidan S. Tabor et Ronald Fischer. « Shelter from the Global Economic Crisis : New Zealand and Overseas-Born Employees' Concerns and Migration Intentions ». Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology 6, no 2 (24 septembre 2012) : 48–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/prp.2012.8.

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This study aimed to explore the personal effect of the global crisis on both New Zealanders and migrants, as well as their intentions and reasons to stay or migrate to another country. Using a mixed method design, we investigated the major concerns of workers in the Wellington region during 2009 and 2010. The main concerns were: salary, workload, job security, disposable income, work budget and job opportunity. New Zealand-born participants were as likely as migrants to express interest in leaving due to the state of the economy. However, overseas-born participants were more likely than New Zealand-born participants to say they would leave if they lost their job.
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Hunt, Sonya. « The social work regulation project in Aotearoa New Zealand ». Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work 29, no 1 (31 mars 2017) : 53–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol29iss1id370.

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INTRODUCTION: In this second of two articles on the history of professionalisation of social work in Aotearoa New Zealand, consideration is given to the more recent coalescing of forces from the 1990s to the initial implementation of the Social Workers Registration Act (2003), which led to our country’s example of a social work regulation project.APPROACH: This critical consideration of social work regulation in Aotearoa New Zealand situates it within the international social work professionalisation context alongside the national context. Consideration is given to the place of leadership and buy-in from the profession, political sponsorship, cultural considerations, and another ministerial review. Overlaying this, an examination of concepts of public trust, respect, and confidence in professions such as social work, are linked to crises of trust in professions in general, and placed within the current neoliberal, market-driven environment in which this project is anchored.CONCLUSION: The literature serves to document the history of social work regulation in Aotearoa New Zealand and as background for an ongoing research project which aims to uncover interests at work and interrogate the legitimacy of those interests, while enabling the voices of key actors from the time to surface, be explored, and be recorded.
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Ongley, Patrick. « Class in New Zealand ». Counterfutures 1 (1 mars 2016) : 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/cf.v1i0.6442.

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In the wake of the global financial crisis and amidst a tide of concern about inequality, now is an opportune time to revisit the topic of class. It is conspicuously absent from most of the discourse surrounding the current state of capitalism and its iniquities, but it is critical to a full understanding of them. In New Zealand, we have always tended to shy away from talk of class, but like all capitalist societies this is a class society, and we are all connected to and divided from others by class relations. Class also connects our present to our past and future, playing key roles in the periodic economic and social transformations shaping our history. New Zealand has been through at least three such transitions, which have all involved significant shifts in class relations and class structures. At this current uncertain juncture in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, we may have the opportunity to forge another transformation.
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Forbes, Andrew. « Book Review : Maritime Security : International Law and Policy Perspectives from Australia and New Zealand ». International Journal of Maritime History 22, no 2 (décembre 2010) : 476–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0843871410022002102.

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Guilford, Katharine Briar. « Countering Foreign Terrorist Fighters : Warrantless Surveillance Powers of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service ». Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 47, no 1 (1 juin 2016) : 95. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v47i1.4880.

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On 9 December 2014, the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service Amendment Act 2014 amended the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service Act 1969 by removing the requirement for an intelligence or visual surveillance warrant in some situations of emergency or urgency. The warrant process is the primary mechanism for the purpose of ensuring surveillance powers are not exercised arbitrarily or unreasonably. Any departure from this process must be justified, limited and proportionate. After a brief look at the history of the Bill, this article will then consider the circumstances in which a warrantless authorisation shall be granted and information retained, with reference to the trigger concepts of "terrorist act", "foreign terrorist fighter" and "security". Amendments proposed include limiting the grounds for warrantless surveillance and information retention to countering "foreign terrorist fighters". It will then discuss the consistency of the Bill with the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, focusing on the authorisation structure and length. It will put forward a proposed amendment that restructures the power such that authorisation for surveillance in urgency will be provided by the Minister and Commissioner within 12 hours.
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Drury, Abdullah. « Wish You Were Here ; A Short History of New Zealand Muslims and Integration ». Nazhruna : Jurnal Pendidikan Islam 3, no 3 (31 octobre 2020) : 355–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.31538/nzh.v3i3.1021.

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The recent court case of the Australian terrorist responsible for murdering 51 worshippers inside two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, has focused attention on this South Pacific nation. Nation-building, with its inherent practices of inclusion and exclusion into the social hierarchy, began here in the nineteenth century and accelerated throughout the twentieth century. History of Muslims in New Zealand, or New Zealand Islam, is a rich narrative illustrative of tendencies and biases that are both common to, as well as divergent from, patterns elsewhere in the English speaking world and Western societies in general. The integration of Muslim immigrants and refugees, and converts to Islam, into this complex social bricolage, however, has been challenging and at times convoluted. This essay will support us to consider why and how this is the case.
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Palmer, Geoffrey. « The Criminal Law, the Intelligence and Security Act and the Protective Security Requirements ». Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 54, no 1 (15 octobre 2023) : 265–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v54i1.8446.

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New Zealand was a pioneer in the codification of its criminal law. The Criminal Code Act was passed in 1893, after a lengthy gestation period. The work owed its origins to law reform activities in India, a tendency spread from India to other British jurisdictions, notably Canada and parts of Australia, but never England. The requirement that common law offences were no longer valid and criminal offences had to be clearly defined in statutes passed by Parliament became accepted orthodoxy here and never questioned. But it is possible, as this article argues, that New Zealand has forgotten the legal implications of its own history of codification. This article argues that s 78AA of the Crimes Act 1961, inserted by the Intelligence and Security Act 2017, is in breach of the codification principle. The vice of the provision is that the content of the Protective Security Requirements is dependent upon the actions of the executive and what it posts on the Internet, not upon law passed by Parliament. It is submitted that the present situation is poor legislative practice and leaves the state of the law in doubt. For security issues to be handled in this fashion is less than satisfactory in a free and open society. The article goes on to analyse the background of New Zealand's criminal law codification and outlines the extensive range of the modern law dealing with the intelligence agencies and how it has expanded in recent years. This history of the agencies is briefly canvassed, including controversial features that have arisen in the past. It concludes that remedial action is necessary and mentions work that is going on within the executive to bring about change. It concludes that issues of legality, human rights and the agencies deserve careful attention and require analysis of the risks to an open society from these developments.
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McClure, Margaret. « A Decade of Confusion : The Differing Directions of Social Security and Accident Compensation 1969 – 1979 ». Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 34, no 2 (2 juin 2003) : 269. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v34i2.5784.

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Overlapping with the implementation of ACC in New Zealand was a parallel review of Social Security, charged with making recommendations for the overall system of social entitlements. The review took place in the context of global economic pressure and changes in family structure during the early 1970s, and represents a marked contrast in tone and ambition from the Woodhouse Commission. This paper contrasts the more modest direction taken by the 1972 Royal Commission on Social Security with the Woodhouse proposals, focusing on such matters as the structure of benefits and the underlying social and community objectives.
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Stephens, Māmari. « Seeking the Common Good or Just Making Us be Good ? Recent Amendment to New Zealand's Social Security Law ». Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 44, no 2 (1 septembre 2013) : 383. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v44i2.4997.

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New Zealand's social security system was born out of a vision of society consistent with a definition of the common good informed by Christian ethics. The past 30 years, in particular, have seen fierce ideological battles fought between the left and right over the extent, coverage, and generosity of the system. Yet a remnant of the vision of the common good remains, whereby individuals can have some access, by virtue of social security, to the sufficient conditions of social life to be free enough to find some level of fulfilment in that life. However, the freedom to be good, as is also required by a broad understanding of the common good, is under threat within New Zealand's social security law. Social security law asserts a vision, and not a coherent one, of what it means to be good in New Zealand society. Newly minted social obligations in the Social Security Act 1964 go beyond the purposes of the legislation; being unconnected to relieving need, maintaining fiscal prudence, or even seeking paid employment as a means of achieving welfare. These modern moral obligations ensure that beneficiaries' freedom to choose to live life in a way consonant with the common good is frustrated, if not substantially abrogated, striking the wrong balance between the law's protection of individual autonomy and its implementation of social imperatives in pursuit of the common good.
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Weir, Rob. « Vagabond Abroad : Mark Twain's 1895 Visit to New Zealand ». Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 8, no 4 (octobre 2009) : 487–514. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537781400001468.

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In 1895, an elderly, tired, and creatively challenged Samuel Clemens embarked upon a worldwide lecture tour whose primary purpose was to retire the debt which had driven him into bankruptcy. His personal woes were largely ignored by enthusiastic New Zealand audiences, which packed the halls and reveled in Clemens as Mark Twain. Some of Twain's novels preceded him, but his success in New Zealand owed more to his stage presence than to his literary prowess. This essay shows how Clemens performed Mark Twain to bridge cultural gaps halfway around the globe. In doing so, it highlights reading differences in English-speaking lands and between social classes. It also casts light on Twain's underappreciated skill in live performance, shows him as a flexible figure responding to particular audiences, and underscores the ways in which aspects of his stage show anticipate the shift to a celebrity-based culture.
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Stanfield, Deb. « A survey of social workers in Aotearoa New Zealand about their professional use of social media ». Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work 31, no 4 (22 décembre 2019) : 35–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol31iss4id677.

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INTRODUCTION: The aim of this article is to report findings from a survey which provides an overall beginning picture of how Aotearoa New Zealand social workers operate in their social media landscape, and an account of their opinions and attitudes about the professional social work use of social media.METHODS: A self-administered internet survey which sits within the context of a mixed methods research design, gathered broad, shallow, mainly quantitative data (QUAN-qual) from 342 Aotearoa New Zealand social workers about their professional participation in social media. Using Likert-type scales and multiple-choice questions, information was sought about the social work experience (behaviour, opinions/attitudes) of using social media for professional reasons, including motivations, limitations and challenges.FINDINGS: Fewer than half of the respondents reported using social media for professional reasons, and there was reticence amongst participants about the professional value of social media. Concerns about privacy, security and ethical issues were presented as primary limitations to the use of social media by both users and non-users—however, non-users were more likely to be prevented by their employers from using social media and, on average, maintained a more neutral stance regarding their interest in using it.CONCLUSION: The analysis of findings from this survey offer insight into areas of potential development, leadership and research regarding social worker use of social media in this country.
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Cartner, Monica, et Tim Bollinger. « Science Policy Reforms : The New Zealand Experience ». Social Studies of Science 27, no 5 (octobre 1997) : 775–803. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030631297027005003.

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Williams, Michael. « Privatisation (Asset Sales) in New Zealand, 1987–1992 ». Economic and Labour Relations Review 3, no 2 (décembre 1992) : 43–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/103530469200300203.

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It is argued that New Zealand's privatisation programme is unlikely to meet its main overt objective of easing fiscal problems. In the case of sales of major public utilities, neither allocative, internal nor social efficiency are likely to be enhanced either. A brief history, and calendar, of the asset sales programme is provided.
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Burroughs, Angela, et John Nauright. « Women's sports and embodiment in Australia and New Zealand ». International Journal of the History of Sport 17, no 2-3 (juin 2000) : 188–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09523360008714133.

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Rathbone, Keith. « Sport, War, and Society in Australia and New Zealand ». International Journal of the History of Sport 37, no 5-6 (2 mars 2020) : 498–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2020.1721969.

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Mutch, Carol. « Citizenship Education in New Zealand : Inside or outside the Curriculum ? » Citizenship, Social and Economics Education 5, no 3 (septembre 2002) : 164–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.2304/csee.2002.5.3.164.

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Notions of what it meant to be a citizen of New Zealand have mirrored the social and political changes as the country's identity moved from a British colony, through independence to a bi-cultural country with a more global outlook. Citizenship ideals were originally taught through history, geography, moral education and social studies. Although some countries, such as the United Kingdom, have moved to an explicit citizenship education programme, citizenship in New Zealand is currently taught through an integrated curriculum approach supported by participatory pedagogical practices. This article reports on research undertaken to investigate the inter- and extra-curricular opportunities for teaching and learning citizenship in New Zealand schools.
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Barnett, Ross, Graham Moon et Robin Kearns. « Social inequality and ethnic differences in smoking in New Zealand ». Social Science & ; Medicine 59, no 1 (juillet 2004) : 129–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.10.010.

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Haynes, Robin, Jamie Pearce et Ross Barnett. « Cancer survival in New Zealand : Ethnic, social and geographical inequalities ». Social Science & ; Medicine 67, no 6 (septembre 2008) : 928–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.05.005.

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Wallis, Joanne, et Anna Powles. « Burden-sharing : the US, Australia and New Zealand alliances in the Pacific islands ». International Affairs 97, no 4 (juillet 2021) : 1045–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiab081.

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Abstract One of President Joseph Biden's foreign policy priorities is to ‘renew’ and ‘strengthen’ the United States' alliances, as they were perceived to have been ‘undermined’ during the Trump administration, which regularly expressed concern that allies were free-riding on the United States' military capability. Yet the broad range of threats states face in the contemporary context suggests that security assistance from allies no longer only—or even primarily—comes in the form of military capability. We consider whether there is a need to rethink understandings of how alliance relationships are managed, particularly how the goals—or strategic burdens—of alliances are understood, how allies contribute to those burdens, and how influence is exercised within alliances. We do this by analysing how the United States–Australia and Australia–New Zealand alliances operate in the Pacific islands. Our focus on the Pacific islands reflects the United States' perception that the region plays a ‘critical’ role in helping to ‘preserve a free and open Indo-Pacific region’. We conclude that these understandings need to be rethought, particularly in the Pacific islands, where meeting non-traditional security challenges such as economic, social and environmental issues, is important to advancing the United States, Australia and New Zealand's shared strategic goal of remaining the region's primary security partners and ensuring that no power hostile to their interests establishes a strategic foothold.
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Brickell, Chris. « A short history of same-sex marriage in New Zealand ». Sexualities 23, no 8 (4 mars 2020) : 1417–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1363460720902713.

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Is same-sex marriage a recent outcome of concerted political action, or does it have a much longer history? This article critically examines the historical tensions and complexities around same-sex marriage by focusing on the New Zealand context. It argues that same-sex marriage is not simply a matter of legal provisions, but also reflects shared customs and incipient forms of politics that took hold before the era of marriage equality and have since been further transformed. By offering an overview of the New Zealand situation between the mid-19th century and the present day, this article examines the cultural and political complexities of same-sex marriage in order to tease out the intricate intersections between historical continuities and social change.
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Selvaraj, Judith Anne. « Inclusive education in New Zealand : rhetoric and reality ». History of Education Review 45, no 1 (6 juin 2016) : 54–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/her-04-2014-0029.

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Purpose – New Zealand continues to struggle with interpreting and implementing its current policy of inclusion, especially as it relates to children traditionally known as having “special educational needs”. The purpose of this paper is to trace the discursive development of institutionalised Special Education in New Zealand and examines how the funding and policy mechanisms of neoliberalism within which rights-based inclusion was introduced have complicated the planning and delivery of services in schools. Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws on Gillian Fulcher’s (1989) discourses of disability as they are expressed through policy documents and educational reports to examine the language and values that have underpinned the development of Special Education policy and provision in New Zealand. Findings – The paper has identified and attempted to explain the extent to which traditional forms of exclusion have continued to structure current policy and practice despite a paradigm shift to inclusion. It argues that this has militated against clear understanding, acceptance and success of this major paradigm shift. Research limitations/implications – In examining the social nature of disability, and its implications in the structures of education today, it is possible to consider opportunities for acting to address these. Originality/value – The value of this work is in taking an historical approach to help understand why there continues be a distance between policy rhetoric and the reality of its implementation in practice.
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Liu, James H., Marc Stewart Wilson, John McClure et Te Ripowai Higgins. « Social identity and the perception of history : cultural representations of Aotearoa/New Zealand ». European Journal of Social Psychology 29, no 8 (décembre 1999) : 1021–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1099-0992(199912)29:8<1021 ::aid-ejsp975>3.0.co;2-4.

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