It has long been established that education is both a colonial and imperial tool that enables colonizing nations to establish themselves in foreign territories. This paper explores New Zealand's historical and contemporary role in the Pacific and how the country has leveraged higher education to both strengthen and continue its ongoing colonial and imperial projects. Utilizing current understandings of critical internationalization this paper will examine the lengths that New Zealand has gone to in order to protect its international standing as a gateway to the Pacific.
*EXTENDED families, *HOUSING, *ETHNIC groups, *PUBLIC health, *FAMILIES, *MEDICAL care
Abstract
Tokelauans have more three-generation families living in one household than any other ethnic group living in New Zealand. They are also the most economically-deprived of all Pacific communities and consequently have little choice but to live in crowded conditions in old and relatively small dwellings at the low price end of the rental market. This paper reports on part of a cross-disciplinary study into health, and housing in which the focus is on the design, production and assessment of a purpose-built house for an extended family of Tokelauan origin. It provides an overview of findings from recent research on health and housing among Pacific peoples living in New Zealand, and identifies various architectural issues associated with health-related problems of cold, damp and crowding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
The focus of This Realm of New Zealand by Alison Quentin-Baxter and Janet McLean was on the constitutional monarchy and its relationship with the laws of mainland New Zealand. This article complements This Realm of New Zealand by focusing on the constitutional monarchy and its relationship with other countries of the Realm of New Zealand - the Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
POLITICAL autonomy, POLITICAL development, SOCIAL development, PRACTICAL politics
Abstract
This article reports on the three small Polynesian atolls of Tokelau which have been under New Zealand administrative control for the past 82 years. It discusses that for most of that time, economic and social change has been peaceable, gradual, and generally unremarkable. However, when the islands declared their intention to move toward self-government in free association with New Zealand, the pace of change accelerated markedly around 2000. Moreover, Tokelau remains a non-self-governing territory.