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1

Kirby, Tony. "Profile: The Liggins Institute, New Zealand". Lancet 386, n.º 9990 (julho de 2015): 234. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(15)61266-1.

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2

Rewcastle, Gordon. "The New Zealand Institute of Chemistry". Chemistry - An Asian Journal 6, n.º 9 (9 de agosto de 2011): 2191–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/asia.201100594.

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3

Miskelly, C. M. "Colonial ornithology in New Zealand—the legacy of the New Zealand Institute". Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 47, n.º 3 (18 de junho de 2017): 244–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03036758.2017.1334673.

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4

Tuffield, Joanne. "Aurora Leadership Institute: a New Zealand perspective". Australian Library Journal 45, n.º 1 (janeiro de 1996): 28–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00049670.1996.10755737.

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5

Middleton, Sue C. "New Zealand Theosophists in “New Education” networks, 1880s-1938". History of Education Review 46, n.º 1 (5 de junho de 2017): 42–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/her-10-2015-0024.

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Purpose It is well-known that Beatrice Ensor, who founded the New Education Fellowship (NEF) in 1921, was a Theosophist and that from 1915 the Theosophical Fraternity in Education she established laid the foundations for the NEF. However, little research has been performed on the Fraternity itself. The travels of Theosophists, texts, money and ideas between Auckland, India and London from the late nineteenth century offer insights into “New Education” networking in the British Commonwealth more broadly. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach This paper draws on archival documents from the Adyar Library and Research Centre, International Theosophical Society (TS) headquarters, Chennai, India; the archive at the headquarters of the New Zealand Section of the TS, Epsom, Auckland; the NEF files at the archive of the London Institute of Education; papers past digital newspaper archive. Findings New Zealand’s first affiliated NEF group was set up by the principal of the Vasanta Gardens Theosophical School, Epsom, in 1933. She was also involved in the New Zealand Section of the Theosophical Fraternity, which held conferences from 1917 to 1927. New Zealand’s Fraternity and Theosophical Education Trust had close links with their counterparts in England and India. The setting up of New Zealand’s first NEF group was enabled by networks created between Theosophists in New Zealand, India and England from the late nineteenth century. Originality/value The contribution of Theosophists to the new education movement has received little attention internationally. Theosophical educational theory and Theosophists’ contributions to New Zealand Education have not previously been studied. Combining transnational historiography with critical geography, this case study of networks between New Zealand, Adyar (India) and London lays groundwork for a wider “spatial history” of Theosophy and new education.
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6

Buckingham, Donna. "A Binding Separation: The New Zealand-Australia Partnership in Free Access to Law". International Journal of Legal Information 38, n.º 3 (2010): 269–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0731126500005874.

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While both New Zealand and Australia have a shared history, each tells a separate story of sovereignty. Both began as British colonies and, when Australia became a federation in 1901, there was opportunity for New Zealand to join. It chose not to do so. To use an image from Moori, New Zealand's indigenous language, it decided to paddle its own waka (canoe). A century and a bit later, the New Zealand Legal Information Institute (NZLII) is another iteration of that drive to differentiate, born of a hope that an indigenous online identity might help to build more comprehensive free access to its legal information.
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7

Dixon, Jennifer. "Annual conference of the New Zealand Planning Institute". Land Use Policy 7, n.º 1 (janeiro de 1990): 86–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0264-8377(90)90058-7.

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8

Moughan, Paul, e Harjinder Singh. "In this Issue". New Zealand Science Review 67, n.º 3 (19 de dezembro de 2023): 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/nzsr.v67.8882.

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It’s with pleasure that the New Zealand Association of Scientists presents this issue of the New Zealand Science Review in collaboration with the Riddet Institute. The articles arising from the Agri-Food Summit meeting in April this year give insight into the research and educational resources necessary for a successful and sustainable agri-food sector in New Zealand. As mentioned in our guest editorial, the Summit speakers were selected to bring somewhat disparate views together on the topic under discussion. The result graphically illustrates the tranformational changes necessary to fully exploit New Zealand’s potential in agri-foods and the importance of growing our collaborative research and educational networks internationally
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9

Beggs, J. M. "Research for the Upstream Petroleum Sector: The Crown Research Institute Concept". Energy Exploration & Exploitation 13, n.º 2-3 (maio de 1995): 245–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0144598795013002-313.

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New Zealand's scientific institutions have been restructured so as to be more responsive to the needs of the economy. Exploration for and development of oil and gas resources depend heavily on the geological sciences. In New Zealand, these activities are favoured by a comprehensive, open-file database of the results of previous work, and by a historically publicly funded, in-depth knowledge base of the extensive sedimentary basins. This expertise is now only partially funded by government research contracts, and increasingly undertakes contract work in a range of scientific services to the upstream petroleum sector, both in New Zealand and overseas. By aligning government-funded research programmes with the industry's knowledge needs, there is maximum advantage in improving the understanding of the occurrence of oil and gas resources. A Crown Research Institute can serve as an interface between advances in fundamental geological sciences, and the practical needs of the industry. Current publicly funded programmes of the Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences include a series of regional basin studies, nearing completion; and multi-disciplinary team studies related to the various elements of the petroleum systems of New Zealand: source rocks and their maturation, migration and entrapment as a function of basin structure and tectonics, and the distribution and configuration of reservoir systems.
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10

McCarthy, Christine. "Going for Gold: New Zealand houses in the 60s through the veil of the NZIA Bronze Medals". Architectural History Aotearoa 2 (30 de abril de 2024): 38–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v2.9472.

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In 1926 the New Zealand Institute of Architects instituted a Gold, Silver, Bronze Medal system to recognise its members' work. By the 1960s, the Bronze Medal recognised the best designed single-unit house. The award system appears to have been a strict one, the Institute feeling no obligation to award the Bronze Medal in 1962, 1964 and 1969. This paper looks at the seven houses recognised by the Bronze Award in the 1960s.
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11

Vereshchaka, A. L. "New species of Galatheidae (Crustacea: Anomura: Galatheoidea) from volcanic seamounts off northern New Zealand". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 85, n.º 1 (fevereiro de 2005): 137–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025315405010957h.

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Two new species of Munida (M. gordoni and M. grieveae) and one new species of Agononida (A. nielbrucei) are described from volcanic seamounts off northern New Zealand (RV ‘Tangaroa’, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research [NIWA], New Zealand). Description of new species and preliminary examination of NIWA collections reveal unusually high endemism of volcanic seamount populations of Galatheidae.
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12

Bouillon, Jean. "Hydromedusae of the New Zealand Oceanographic Institute (Hydrozoa, Cnidaria)". New Zealand Journal of Zoology 22, n.º 2 (janeiro de 1995): 223–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03014223.1995.9518038.

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13

Oakley, Amanda M. M. "Teledermatology in New Zealand". Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery 5, n.º 2 (março de 2001): 111–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/120347540100500203.

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Background: Teledermatology is the delivery of specialist dermatological services at a distance. It has become possible because of technological advances in digital imaging and telecommunications. Consultations may be “interactive” using video-conferencing equipment or “store-and-forward” using prerecorded text and images. The best method to deliver teledermatology services is unknown. Objective: Studies were designed to determine (a) if it was possible to diagnose and manage skin diseases using video-conferencing equipment, (b) if teledermatology was acceptable to patients and medical practitioners, and (c) whether it offered any economic advantages. We have also compared interactive and store-and-forward techniques. Method: The trials were conducted in collaboration with the Institute of Telemedicine & Telecare, Queen's University, Belfast, as part of the UK Teledermatology Trials. Remits: The trials have involved more than 300 teledermatology consultations. Having established that a diagnosis can be made in more than two-thirds of the cases, the majority of video consultations have resulted in satisfactory management, with only small numbers of patients requiring face-to-face review. Teledermatology is generally popular with patients and can save them considerable time and money. Routine clinics continue in three centers. We have found that effective store-and-forward teledermatology requires very good images and comprehensive historical referral data.
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14

Nation, Paul, e Averil Coxhead. "Vocabulary size research at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand". Language Teaching 47, n.º 3 (3 de junho de 2014): 398–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261444814000111.

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The English Language Institute (now the School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies) at Victoria University of Wellington has a long history of corpus-based vocabulary research, especially after the arrival of the second director of the institute, H. V. George, and the appointment of Helen Barnard, whom George knew in India. George's successor, Graeme Kennedy, also saw corpus linguistics as a very fruitful and important area of applied language research.
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15

DIXON, JENNIFER. "PEOPLE, POLITICS, AND PROCESSES. THE NEW ZEALAND PLANNING INSTITUTE CONFERENCE". New Zealand Geographer 46, n.º 1 (abril de 1990): 50–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-7939.1990.tb01951.x.

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16

Editors. "New Zealand Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Science Forum 2009". New Zealand Science Review 66, n.º 2 (17 de abril de 2024): 81–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/nzsr.v66.9428.

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17

Tyler, Linda. "Art in the service of agriculture: John Buchanan’s nature printing of ‘The Indigenous Grasses of New Zealand’". Back Story Journal of New Zealand Art, Media & Design History, n.º 1 (1 de dezembro de 2016): 23–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/backstory.vi1.10.

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To disseminate new knowledge about scientific discoveries in New Zealand in the nineteenth century, draughtsmen were employed to convey the characteristics of a specimen using techniques of lithography, occasionally assisted by photography and microscopy. The Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute was an annual publication of scientific papers presented by experts at the various provincial branches throughout the country, and was first published in Wellington in 1868 and issued in 1869.1 Until his retirement from government service in 1885, it was primarily illustrated by John Buchanan (1819-1898). This paper aims to give a broader understanding of Buchanan’s significance for both New Zealand’s science history and its art history by considering his relationship to the emergent techniques of photography and lithography. His isolated use of nature printing for the production of the three volume guide to forage plants, The Indigenous Grasses of New Zealand, is placed in the context of the nineteenth century approach to scientific illustration as evidence.
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18

Suckling, David Maxwell. "New Zealand Plant Protection Medal 2017". New Zealand Plant Protection 71 (26 de julho de 2018): 358–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.30843/nzpp.2018.71.223.

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This medal is awarded by the New Zealand Plant Protection Society to honour those who have made exceptional contributions to plant protection in New Zealand in the widest sense. The medal is awarded for outstanding services to plant protection, whether through research, education, implementation or leadership. In 2017, the New Zealand Plant Protection Medal was awarded Prof David Maxwell (Max) Suckling. In his 35+ years of research, Max has been pivotal in bringing odour-based technologies to New Zealand. In particular, his research on insect pheromones has enabled integrated pest management to be realised in this country. As a result, New Zealand plant-based industries can access premium overseas markets due to the low pest prevalence and low pesticide residue on primary produce. It has also reduced grower exposure to pesticides. The acknowledgement of his broad knowledge of risks and benefits that new organisms and substances can pose to New Zealand has been exemplified by his position of Chair of the Environmental Risk Management Authority Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Committee where he presided over decisions from determining which organisms are new to New Zealand through to whether the benefits of the release of new organisms outweighed the risks. His unique knowledge and ability to make sound judgements based on the evidence presented also led to two invitations back to the Environmental Protection Authority after he had finished as a special member on the Committee so that New Zealand could safely continue to assess the use of biological control agents. Since 2004, in his role as Science Group Leader of the Biosecurity group at The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Ltd (PFR), Max has been instrumental in developing tools to improve detection sensitivity and socially acceptable eradication options for new pests that threaten New Zealand, such as the Queensland fruit fly and the painted apple moth. Max has been a member of the New Zealand Plant Protection Society for many years and served as President from 1999 to 2001. He was nominated for the Medal because of the passion he has displayed towards developing and making available socially acceptable pest eradication and management tools in New Zealand. The work that he and the chemical ecology team he has built and led, has had a large impact in many sectors from horticulture to biosecurity. This use of socially acceptable tools for the productive sectors naturally led to Max’s involvement in the pest surveillance and eradication space. He led the Eradication and Response Theme in the Better Border Biosecurity collaboration for over ten years, co-ordinating research among Crown Research Institutes to achieve their goals and the goals of New Zealand’s biosecurity practitioners. He has gone beyond odour-based technologies and branched into sound, vision and sterile-insect technologies for managing pests, sticking with the social acceptance theme. Max is an innovative thinker, testing novel approaches for pest management, and can bring quite separate groups together to achieve a goal. For example, he combined an irradiator used to sterilise medical equipment and insect rearing to achieve a boutique insect-sterilisation programme against the painted apple moth. By pushing the envelope, he is seen as a world leader in his field of using socially acceptable tools, with numerous invitations as a keynote speaker at international meetings, which has allowed him to return to New Zealand with some of the latest scientific ideas. He has served on working groups of the sterile-insect technique for the joint division of the Food and Agriculture Organization/International Atomic Energy Agency. He was recently made a professor when he was made a joint appointment at PFR and the University of Auckland, and has supervised and co-supervised a number of PhD and MSc students. His outstanding collaboration and mentoring skills enable him to work across different fields, secure new knowledge and tools for novel pest-management approaches, bring together people from different organisations, and mentor ‘thinking-out-of-the-square’ scientists for the future. His desire to protect New Zealand’s flora, fauna and people, make him a worthy recipient of the New Zealand Plant Protection Medal. NZPP Medal recipients for the previous five years: 2016: Rob Beresford 2015: Gary Barker 2014: - 2013: Andrew Hodson 2012: Margaret Dick
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Von Münch, Ingo. "A German Perspective on Legal and Political Problems of Coalition Governments". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 30, n.º 1 (1 de junho de 1999): 65. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v30i1.6013.

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In September and October 1998 Professor von Münch was a visiting fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Public Law. During an extremely busy visit, Professor von Münch gave a number of seminars on aspects of German Constitutional and Electoral Law. These seminars, given by both a leading Constitutional and Electoral Law academic and a former deputy prime minister of the State of Hamburg and former member of the Bundesrat, or German Senate, were timely given the trials and tribulations of New Zealand's first MMP Coalition Government which had then just ended in the sacking of the minor party's leader as Deputy Prime Minister. In contrast to much of the contemporary gloom at the perceived failed hope of MMP, Professor von Münch presented a hopeful view of both the electoral system that New Zealand had imported from Germany and of the possibilities of Coalition Government. The following is an enlarged text of a speech, delivered to the Public Law section of the New Zealand Ministry of Justice.
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20

McFadgen, B. G., e M. R. Manning. "Calibrating New Zealand Radiocarbon Dates of Marine Shells". Radiocarbon 32, n.º 2 (1990): 229–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200040194.

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Radiocarbon activity of 11 modern marine shell samples from the New Zealand region is enhanced compared with the surface layers of the average world ocean. The measured enhancement, δR, is equivalent to −31 ± 13 years. On this basis, the Institute of Nuclear Sciences will now use a value of −30 years in reporting calibrated ages for marine shell samples.
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21

Wood, Peter. ""... from teat-jerk to quidnunc": A.R.D. Fairburn and the Formation of an Ideology of Architectural Nationalism in New Zealand". Architectural History Aotearoa 3 (30 de outubro de 2006): 44–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v3i.6799.

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In 1934 ARD Fairburn published the essay "Some Aspects of N.Z. Art and Letters" in the journal Art in New Zealand. In it he criticized Alan Mulgan's book Home: A Colonial's Adventure, which had been first published in 1927, and was reprinted in 1934. It was, in Fairburn's view, an account unacceptably steeped in romantic melancholy for a distant motherland that was no longer as germane as it had once been. Instead he proposed looking to the American Transcendentalists Twain and Thoreau for direction. Also published in 1934 was a small book from the New Zealand Institute of Architects called Building in New Zealand. In it the NZIA made a case for the professional and social responsibilities of the architect in New Zealand and it is best described as conservative. However it is pertinent that this book was edited by Alan Mulgan. Here the role of the architect in cast in practical terms that bear direct comparison to the code of practice issue for the Royal Institute of British Architects. Mulgan's contribution to discussion on New Zealand architecture is limited to this publication, and it is likely his editorship of Building in New Zealand was motivated more by depression economics than architectural interest. However this book is still an important summary of the profession at that time, and it links architecture to Mulgan's romantic writings though the reiteration of a colonial fountainhead. By contrast Fairburn would go on to champion a national voice for New Zealand's writers, artists, and architects. Moreover he established a close relationship with Vernon Brown, and was to associate with Bill Wilson and the Architectural Group. Indeed, the limited writings available from these architectural associates often echo Fairburn's 1934 call for an antipodean "honesty" in "our" buildings. It is in the immediate post war period that the emergence of a national architectural expression in New Zealand is most celebrated, being lead in Auckland by Brown, Wilson, and the Architectural Group. However an examination of the writings by Fairburn and Mulgan shows that the elements of the debate were already in place well before then. I conclude that the antecedent for the emergence of debate on a national architectural character appears, however unintentionally, in the 1934 writings of Fairburn and Mulgan. Critical to this is discussion on we mean by "honest" architectural work.
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Jackson, Louisa. "Child Abuse Intervention: Reporting Protocols in the New Zealand Health Sector". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 44, n.º 1 (1 de maio de 2013): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v44i1.5011.

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Reporting child abuse has been the subject of a long running socio-legal debate in New Zealand. Its most recent iteration is the Government’s 2012 proposal to require all agencies working with children to institute protocols for referring maltreatment. However, New Zealand’s health sector already operates under such a regime, with little investigation of its success. This article offers a critical analysis of the sector’s protocol framework. It argues that the protocols have established a detailed and enforceable structure for referring maltreatment, but identifies inconsistencies that risk discrepancies in the treatment of vulnerable children. Accordingly, the article recommends that the framework be rationalised and suggests that the legislative proposal include universal thresholds for referral to avoid replication of this problem on a national scale.
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Bassett, Don. "Architecture and Art in the Pages of the NZIA Journal to 1918". Architectural History Aotearoa 1 (5 de dezembro de 2004): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v1i0.7888.

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While Adolf Loos had declared in 1910 that architecture and art were two different things, the architectural profession in New Zealand continued to think of architecture as one of the arts for decades after that date. This paper will examine this issue for the period from 1912 to 1920 as revealed in the pages of the Journal of Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute of Architects. John Ruskin, always recognised as a major influence upon the Arts and Crafts Movement, is shown to have been a forceful influence behind the wider thinking of the architectural profession in New Zealand throughout this period. This influence concerns matters of style and decoration, materials and, above all, the integrity and commitment of the architect. Several lectures delivered to regional institutes and recorded in the journal are examined to reveal on the one hand a confidence that architecture was even perhaps the greatest of the arts but also that recent developments in materials and construction desperately called for the profession to find a new approach.
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Beer, L. W. "The Constitution of Japan, at the Founding and 50 Years Later". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 27, n.º 1 (1 de abril de 1997): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v27i1.6126.

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This is a revised version of a paper presented by Professor Beer at a combined meeting of the New Zealand Institute of Public Law and of the New Zealand Association for Comparative Law in the Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand in August 1996. The author explores constitutional issues in Japan after WWII. As the world's prime example of successful synthesis of radically different traditions of law and constitution, the author concludes that Japan deserves global respect and more study in the emerging multi-cultural age.
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AHYONG, SHANE T. "First records of Thryaplax Castro, 2007 and Calocarcinus Calman, 1909 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura) from the Kermadec Islands, New Zealand". Zootaxa 1982, n.º 1 (19 de janeiro de 2009): 66–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1982.1.4.

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Among the Brachyura from the Kermadec Islands in the invertebrate collection of the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand (NIWA), are two specimens representing two deep-water species previously not known from the region. Both specimens were collected at the same station, together with the paratypes of the parthenopid crab, Garthambrus tani Ahyong, 2008. The new records are reported below to formally document their occurrence at the Kermadec Islands, New Zealand; both also represent the first records of their respective genera from New Zealand waters. Measurements of specimens, in millimetres, refer to carapace length (cl) and carapace width (cw).
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Poskitt, Jenny, e Esther Smaill. "New assessment developments in Aotearoa". Set: Research Information for Teachers, n.º 1 (1 de junho de 2022): 52–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.18296/set.1501.

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Set's Assessment News first announced the launch of the New Zealand Assessment Institute (NZAI) 4 years ago, and this current article looks at how NZAI has progressed, highlighting its key publications and activities from 2021. This update should be of use to teachers and school leaders who want to explore assessment more deeply, gain practical tips, or hook into NZAI’s developments during 2022 and beyond.
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Baylis, Claire. "Reviewing Statutory Models of Mediation/Conciliation in New Zealand: Three Conclusions". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 30, n.º 1 (1 de junho de 1999): 279. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v30i1.6024.

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In the last two decades there has been a trend in New Zealand of enacting statutory models of mediation/ conciliation. This article raises concerns about the treatment of fundamental process issues in the many statutory models and the inconsistencies between the models. The article is based on current research by the author which will be completed by the end of 1999. Some funding for this project has been gratefully received from the Victoria University of Wellington Foundation through the New Zealand Institute for Dispute Resolution.
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Linzey, Kate. "Constructing Education: 1961-69". Architectural History Aotearoa 2 (3 de outubro de 2005): 10–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v2i0.6707.

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The 1960s were a time of great change and growth in New Zealand's tertiary eduction sector, and the university-based discipline of architecture was in no way exempt from this progress. In response to the Parry Report of 1959-1960, the New Zealand government passed the 1961 Universities Act, which dissolved the federated University of New Zealand. This Act opened the way for the independence of the four universities of Auckland, Victoria, Canterbury and Otago, and the two allied agricultural colleges of Massey and Lincoln. Under the federated university system, Auckland University College had been the centre of architectural training, and had delivered extramural course through colleges in the other centres. As the "disproportionate number" of extramural and part-time study had been criticisms levelled by the Parry Report, it was obvious that another School of Architecture would now be required, but where? Ever an argumentative association, members of the New Zealand Institute of Architects engaged in a lively debate on the choice, positing Victoria University in Wellington, and Canterbury University in Christchurch, as the major contenders. By the end of the decade university-based architectural training would expand at both Auckland and (the new) Wellington Schools, New Zealand's first PhD in Architecture would be conferred on Dr John Dickson, and many of the careers of architects and architectural academics who went on to construct the discipline as it is today, had begun.
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Allan, William. "Sir William Ian Axford. 2 January 1933 — 13 March 2010". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 59 (janeiro de 2013): 5–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2013.0007.

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William Ian Axford was born and educated in New Zealand, receiving his ME and MSc degrees from Canterbury College of the University of New Zealand in 1956. He completed his PhD at Manchester University in 1960 and spent the following year at Cambridge University before moving to the Defence Research Board of Canada. From 1963 to 1974 he held professorships at Cornell University and the University of California at San Diego. From 1974 to 2001 he directed the Max Planck Institute for Aeronomy in Germany, with two three-year periods of leave in New Zealand in 1982–85 and 1992–95. Ian Axford was one of the greatest plasma physicists of the space age. He made fundamental contributions to a wide range of topics in the fields of space physics and astrophysics, including the dynamics of the Earth’s magnetosphere, the magnetic field reconnection process, the Sun’s atmosphere and the formation and evolution of the solar wind, the interaction of the solar wind with the interstellar medium and with comets, cosmic ray propagation and modulation in the Solar System, the acceleration of cosmic rays in supernova shocks, and the use of robotic spacecraft in the exploration of the Solar System. Ian was also a remarkable science administrator, completely restructuring the Max Planck Institute for Aeronomy and transforming it into one of the world’s leading space and atmospheric research institutes. He was a great advocate of international collaboration in science, and reinvigorated several flagging institutions such as the European Geophysical Society and the International Council of Scientific Unions Committee on Space Research.
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Mahoney, P. D. "Private Settlement - Public Justice?" Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 31, n.º 1 (3 de abril de 2000): 225. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v31i1.5966.

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In this paper, the Principal Family Court Judge discusses the pros and cons of "court-annexed" mediation services. He notes some powerful constitutional arguments against such forms of mediation but eventually agrees with the stand taken by the Australian and New Zealand Council of Chief Justices in support of a fully serviced court-based system. This paper was delivered at the New Zealand Institute for Dispute Resolution Colloquium held on 29 June 1999.
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Editor. "Notes on earthquake insurance in California and New Zealand". Bulletin of the New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering 19, n.º 4 (31 de dezembro de 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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Schnabel, Kareen E., Qi Kou e Peng Xu. "Validation of Three Species of Spongicolid Shrimp of New Zealand: Spongicoloides clarki Schnabel, Kou & Xu, S. sonne Schnabel, Kou & Xu and Spongiocaris antipodes Schnabel, Kou & Xu (Crustacea: Decapoda: Stenopodidea)". Taxonomy 1, n.º 3 (9 de setembro de 2021): 266–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/taxonomy1030020.

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Schnabel, Kou & Xu reported three new species of spongicolid shrimp from New Zealand. The present note, with ZooBank registrations, serve to validate the names Spongicoloides clarki, S. sonne and Spongiocaris antipodes by fulfilling Code conditions for nomenclatural availability. As such, the date and authorship of the species names take the date of publication of this note. Specimens are deposited at the National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research, Wellington (NIWA) and the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington (NMNZ).
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33

Devonport, Bernadette F. "The participation of women in the New Zealand Institute of Chartered Accountants". Pacific Accounting Review 20, n.º 3 (19 de setembro de 2008): 269–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/01140580810920245.

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Editors. "New Zealand Association of Scientists Submission to the Crown Research Institute Taskforce". New Zealand Science Review 66, n.º 4 (17 de abril de 2024): 138–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/nzsr.v66.9398.

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35

Aye, Phyu Sin, Shwe Sin Win, Sandar Tin Tin e J. Mark Elwood. "Comparison of Cancer Mortality and Incidence Between New Zealand and Australia and Reflection on Differences in Cancer Care: An Ecological Cross-Sectional Study of 2014-2018". Cancer Control 30 (abril de 2023): 107327482311523. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10732748231152330.

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Background Despite many background similarities, New Zealand showed excess cancer deaths compared to Australia in previous studies. This study extends this comparison using the most recent data of 2014-2018. Methods This study used publicly available cancer mortality and incidence data of New Zealand Ministry of Health and Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, and resident population data of Statistics New Zealand. Australian cancer mortality and incidence rates were applied to New Zealand population, by site of cancer, year, age and sex, to estimate the expected numbers, which were compared with the New Zealand observed numbers. Results For total cancers in 2014-2018, New Zealand had 780 excess deaths in women (17.1% of the annual total 4549; 95% confidence interval (CI) 15.8-18.4%), and 281 excess deaths in men (5.5% of the annual total 5105; 95% CI 4.3-6.7%) compared to Australia. The excess was contributed by many major cancers including colorectal, melanoma, and stomach cancer in both sexes; lung, uterine, and breast cancer in women, and prostate cancer in men. New Zealand’s total cancer incidences were lower than those expected from Australia’s in both women and men: average annual difference of 419 cases (−3.6% of the annual total 11 505; 95% CI −4.5 to −2.8%), and 1485 (−11.7% of the annual total 12 669; 95% CI -12.5 to −10.9%), respectively. Comparing time periods, the excesses in total cancer deaths in women were 15.1% in 2000-07, and 17.5% in 1996-1997; and in men 4.7% in 2000-2007 and 5.6% in 1996-1997. The differences by time period were non-significant. Conclusion Excess mortality from all cancers combined and several common cancers in New Zealand, compared to Australia, persisted in 2014-2018, being similar to excesses in 2000-2007 and 1996-1997. It cannot be explained by differences in incidence, but may be attributable to various aspects of health systems governance and performance.
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Kelly, Michael J. "Sir Paul Terence Callaghan FRS PCNZM. 19 August 1947 — 24 March 2012". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 63 (janeiro de 2017): 79–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2017.0006.

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Paul Callaghan will be remembered internationally for many seminal contributions to the foundations of magnetic resonance imaging as applied to the rheological analysis of a series of real world materials – paints, gels, polymer solutions – and at home in New Zealand as the leading physical scientist of his day, who became a familiar science communicator through popular books, a radio programme and the promotion of high technology as a part of the New Zealand economy. Apart from his time as a research student in Oxford (1970–75) and short stays abroad, Paul undertook all his research in New Zealand, and was a passionate and effective advocate for New Zealand science. His direct and continuing legacy for condensed matter science in New Zealand was his leadership in the foundation in 2002 of the multi-university MacDiarmid Institute devoted to research in advanced materials and nanotechnology, which he led through its first five years and into its second phase. In later life he was the founder of Magritek, a company manufacturing the specialist magnets needed for resonance imaging and spectroscopy.
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37

Doskatsch, Irene. "Australian and New Zealand Institute for Information Literacy (ANZIIL): New Body to Champion Information Literacy". Australian Academic & Research Libraries 33, n.º 2 (janeiro de 2002): 113–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00048623.2002.10755187.

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Walls and Jason Twamley, Dan. "Introduction". Australian Journal of Physics 49, n.º 4 (1996): 713. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ph960713.

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The Workshop on Atom Optics was held at the University of Adelaide in September 1995. It was attended by pproximately 40 physicists from Australia and New Zealand. The venue for the workshop was the new Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of Adelaide which provided excellent facilities for lectures and discussion. Atom optics is a field which has grown rapidly since its beginning approximately five years ago. There are now several groups in Australia and New Zealand pursuing research activities in both theoretical and experimental aspects of atom optics.
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Kirkham, M. B., e B. E. Clothier. "Loss and Recovery of Research Investment for Applied Sciences: A Salutary Lesson from New Zealand". HortTechnology 17, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2007): 9–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.17.1.9.

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In 1992, all governmental resourcing and investment in New Zealand, including that for science, underwent dramatic reform. The global philosophy driving the reform was new public management—a method by which nations could be run more economically by emulating the commercial world. Central to the reform was separation of policy, purchasing (investment), and providers (in the case of research scientists). The reform led to a large reduction in the number of governmental scientists. For example, in 1 year alone, 2001–2002, the Horticultural and Food Research Institute, one of the nine governmental branches of science, lost 51 staff members, 10% of its work force. Over a decade later after the establishment of the reform, in July 2003, the New Zealand government's investment agency announced its budget for the next 6 years. The government-funded science sectors considered to do modern research such as computer technology and biotechnology, and halved funding for land-related sciences. The reduced budget dramatically limited New Zealand's capacity for research in soil and land-use science and ended all research positions in this area (38 jobs). Public outcry through newspaper editorials and from leading businessmen, along with effective leadership from the scientific community, led to the reestablishment of funding in the form of a virtual national center called Sustainable Land Use Research Initiative (SLURI). The elimination of funding for soil and land-use science research in New Zealand was an unexpected and potentially disastrous result of new public management. New Zealand's experience has relevance for the United States, because budgets for agricultural research are being severely reduced or converted to competitive funding. The U.S. President's fiscal year 2006 budget proposed to cut formula funding by 50% and to zero it out in fiscal year 2007. The funds would have been put in competitive grants. In New Zealand, the lack of ability to respond to a scientific problem demonstrated that a balance must be maintained in funding decisions so that scientific capability is retained to solve unforeseen future problems.
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Halligan, John. "R. C. Mascarenhas (ed), Public and Private Enterprise in New Zealand (New Zealand Institute of Public Administration, Wellington, 1984), pp. 133, $15.00." Political Science 37, n.º 1 (julho de 1985): 76–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003231878503700106.

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Finnie, David A., Rehan Masood, Seth Goldsworthy e Benjamin Harding. "Embodied Carbon in New Zealand Commercial Construction". Energies 17, n.º 11 (29 de maio de 2024): 2629. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en17112629.

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Decarbonization is gaining priority from the macro to the micro level. However, achieving this is a critical challenge, as industries are still immature. This study explores the practices used to calculate and reduce embodied carbon (EC) in New Zealand (NZ) commercial construction projects. In the Paris Agreement, NZ pledged to reduce its net GHG emissions to 50 percent below the gross 2005 levels by 2030. The built environment generates approximately 40% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, with 11% being generated by manufacturing materials. EC represents carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted into the atmosphere throughout the extraction, fabrication, transportation, and assembly of building materials. A survey questionnaire was distributed to stakeholders in commercial construction via the New Zealand Institute of Quantity Surveyors (NZIQS) open forum. Twenty-seven valid responses were analyzed. The survey tested and expanded on the interview findings. Calculating and reducing EC are not mandatory in NZ. Most industry professionals had yet to experience EC calculation in projects. Clients most commonly drive EC reduction in public projects with calculations that are often conducted during the concept or detailed design stages. The challenges in measuring and lowering EC include a lack of client willingness to fund EC calculation, lack of knowledge and experience, lack of previous cost data, lack of EC materials, and lack of fit-for-purpose EC calculation tools. These findings may inform NZ government policy initiatives supporting EC reduction to meet their 2050 target.
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Rana, Lata, e Yvonne Culbreath. "Culturally inclusive pedagogies of care: A narrative inquiry". Journal of Pedagogy 10, n.º 2 (1 de dezembro de 2019): 87–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/jped-2019-0008.

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Abstract This paper is a reflection on culturally relevant pedagogies of care to achieve more equitable outcomes for diverse cultures within early childhood. The authors are academics at a tertiary institute in Auckland, New Zealand. Our aim is to share our experiences as teachers in a diverse and multi-ethnic city in New Zealand. Authors draw on narrative methodology to deconstruct our experiences and share how we position ourselves in teaching and learning. The paper emphasises an enactment of pedagogy that recognises diverse cultural knowledge and other ways of knowing.
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Richardson, I. L. M. "Family Property Symposium: Welcome Address". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 25, n.º 1 (1 de fevereiro de 1995): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v25i1.6219.

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Rt Hon Sir Ivor Richardson, then a Judge of the Court of Appeal and Chairperson of the New Zealand Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, provides a welcoming address to the Symposium on Family Property, Law and Policy.
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44

Allender, Eric. "Report on the annual summer meeting of the New Zealand mathematics research institute". ACM SIGACT News 31, n.º 2 (junho de 2000): 60–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/348210.348223.

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Ryan, Chris, e Opal Higgins. "Experiencing Cultural Tourism: Visitors at the Maori Arts and Crafts Institute, New Zealand". Journal of Travel Research 44, n.º 3 (fevereiro de 2006): 308–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0047287505279002.

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Hodder, Peter. "Independent scientific research entities in New Zealand: Cawthron Institute as a case study". New Zealand Science Review 75, n.º 1 (21 de agosto de 2022): 3–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/nzsr.v75i1.7863.

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47

Wood, Peter. "One Man's Plan: The Story of Gerald Melling's Tenure as Editor of New Zealand Architect, and some Implications Thereof". Architectural History Aotearoa 6 (30 de outubro de 2009): 78–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v6i.6758.

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In late 1983 Gerald Melling replaced Gordon Moller as editor of the New Zealand Institute of Architects' journal, New Zealand Architect. The appointment of Melling was not contentious, Moller was stepping aside after a lengthy term, and while Melling brought less architectural experience to the job he added weight as a noted writer and editor. Melling edited New Zealand Architect for 11 issues, from No.4, 1983, through to issue No.2, 1986, and, as the NZIA might have expected, the first issues under Melling's influence displayed a far greater degree of creative and editorial urgency than had been the case previously. Yet, the end, when it came, was sharp, with Melling stepping down from the role in the aftermath of legal threats, and there are still rumours that the Institute abandoned its editorial association to the journal as a direct result of Melling's editorial control. This is not true, and this paper traces the circumstances of that myth. During Melling's supervision New Zealand Architect entered into a brief period of critical commentary in which New Zealand's buildings were viewed as a responsible to a wider public, and accountable to that audience through criticism. In his first editorial Melling wrote of the need for openness where architects get things right, and an honest reflection on where they get them wrong. Unfortunately the principle audience for New Zealand Architect, New Zealand's architects, did not always feel quite so happy about discussing their failures. Indeed, in one key instance they felt compelled to defend their work through legal channels. In his 1985 end-of-year Wellington BLAND Awards (Blatantly Limpwristed Acceptance of Nondescript Design) Melling erroneously named the architects responsible for the "Gross, overbearing, cheap and nasty" Control Data Building as Williams Developments. The architects, understandably perhaps, reacted immediately to what they perceived as a harmful association and demanded a retraction. One was offered, in the next issue, but it must be added that the sceptical tone of Melling's withdrawal, which involved reiterating his condemnation of the Control Data Building, was not helped by another mistaken attribution. The next issue, in which authorship was finally resolved, was to be Melling's last. Behind the print of the BLAND Awards was a flurry of threats, legal and otherwise, which called into attention the financial responsibility held by the NZIA in the advent of legitimate claims of slander being upheld, soon after Melling stepped down. This paper reviews the editorial content of New Zealand Architect immediately prior to, during the period of, and subsequent to Gerald Melling's dismissal as editor. Attention is given to the circumstances of his departure from, and the NZIA's subsequent dissolution of any legal relationship with the journal. I suggest that after Melling the journal's intellectual attention focused on the successful activities of architects and has not since seriously discussed wider issues regarding the social and public responsibilities of buildings, or architects. As Gerald Melling wrote in his first editorial, architects are seldom held to public account for their failures. Sadly, the Institute's response to one editor's attempt to rectify this oversight set its own journal on a course of social disengagement from which it has never been able to recover.
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Nadarajan, Jayanthi, Azadeh Esfandiari, Liya Mathew, Jasmine Divinagracia, Claudia Wiedow e Ed Morgan. "Development, Management and Utilization of a Kiwifruit (Actinidia spp.) In Vitro Collection: A New Zealand Perspective". Plants 12, n.º 10 (17 de maio de 2023): 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12102009.

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The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited (PFR) supports a large kiwifruit breeding program that includes more than twenty Actinidia species. Almost all the kiwifruit accessions are held as field collections across a range of locations, though not all plants are at multiple locations. An in vitro collection of kiwifruit in New Zealand was established upon the arrival of Pseudomonas syringae pv. Actinadiae-biovar 3 in 2010. The value of an in vitro collection has been emphasized by restrictions on importation of new plants into New Zealand and increasing awareness of the array of biotic and abiotic threats to field collections. The PFR in vitro collection currently holds about 450 genotypes from various species, mostly A. chinensis var. chinensis and A. chinensis var. deliciosa. These collections and the in vitro facilities are used for germplasm conservation, identification of disease-free plants, reference collections and making plants available to users. Management of such a diverse collection requires appropriate protocols, excellent documentation, training, sample tracking and databasing and true-to-type testing, as well as specialized facilities and resources. This review also discusses the New Zealand biosecurity and compliance regime governing kiwifruit plant movement, and how protocols employed by the facility aid the movement of pathogen-free plants within and from New Zealand.
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Palmer, Sir Geoffrey. "Provision of Legal Services to Government". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 31, n.º 1 (3 de abril de 2000): 65. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v31i1.5963.

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This article was presented as a lecture on "Capital Law School Day" organised by the New Zealand Institute of Advanced Legal Studies to mark the occasion of the centenary of the Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington in 1999
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Hardie Boys, Sir Michael. "Reflections on the Last 50 Years of the Law and Law School". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 31, n.º 1 (3 de abril de 2000): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v31i1.5969.

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This paper was presented as a lecture on "Capital Law School Day" organised by the New Zealand Institute of Advanced Legal Studies to mark the occasion of the centenary of the Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington in 1999.
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