Saturday, August 28, 2010

puff 515

Key, English and the National Party are running New Zealand as though it is a finance company.Shelling out 1.6 billion to South Canterbury Finance to prop up investors in the failed set of companies associated with the Timaru based Hubbard outfit is putting the New Zealand public at risk. What percentage of GDP is this?
Te Ururoa Flavell is right to compare the 1.6 billion spent with the amount spent on Treaty settlements. And it is outrageous to ask avery man woman and child in South Auckland or Northland or the Urewera to put up 400 dollars or so to save the mismanaged business of a South Island crank.
But mostly we do not have the resources too gamble this amout of money, 1.6 billion, on saving the unsaveable. This is a delusion of grandeur, a conceit.

Saying of the week
Humans say that time passes
Time says that humans pass
Aotearoa Waka question of the day
What is ACC doing about victims of abuse?

Rugby
Good on Auckland for beating Taranaki! Ripia, The Taranaki First Five and kicker had an off day but so did the Taranaki forwards who were scared off the ball by the Aucklanders. Moli the lock from the under twenties who repaced Haiu in the starting lineup did well in most places in the park but not the lineout. The game was Taranaki's to lose and this they did. Not a pretty game of rugby, in fact gthe first half was a triumph of mediocrity. But Berquist did well and generally the Auks stood up.

Split Pin Engineering Rocks!
Safe and Sound Locksmiths Rule!

puff is a daily spin on what is going on. For example the Hotaka says what is happening today on the radio and puts this in context for the month.
puff is sponsored by Campus Press and the Campus Press Update follows below.
What else is happening? Get back to us via the Comments section of this Blog!

Papers on Social Work 4th Edition by Peter Cleave has been released by Campus Press, There is a discussion of Whanau Ora the New Zealand government's strategy for social work announced in April-May 2010. There is a revisiting of the theme of restorative justice. All this and the classic, prize winning essays on social work education and value systems that have made Papers on Social Work one of the best selling books in the Campus Press set, internationally and locally.


Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition has the ISBN
978-1-877229-47-3

NZD 60.00 including tax plus 7.50 Post and Pack no matter how big the order.

Payment COD into nominated account.

Delivery within a month.

Order through comment or email to puffmedia@yahoo.co.nz using the Order Form at the bottom of this email.

About the author.
It is said that Peter Cleave has more books in New Zealand Libraries than any other author. Beginning as a collaborator on The Oxford Picture Dictionary of Maori in 1979 there has been a consistent pattern of a book published, an article in a referred journal and then a radio commentary repeated over a long period. With this pattern of published work have come the prizes; the First Class Masterate from Auckland University and a Commonwealth scholarship to the University of Oxford, the Phillip Bagby Scholarship and Rhodes Foundation funds while doing the Oxford Doctorate, the chair of the college common room and on from these to taking the prizes for best paper at conferences like the International Federation of Social Workers in Montreal in 2000.

Peter Cleave is without peer at the meeting place of language, culture and criticism, locally and internationally and this is seen in the sale of his books to libraries in New Zealand and Australia and around the world.

At the same time Peter Cleave, a former captain of the Manurewa High School First Fifteen in South Auckland, works on community radio and touches base with working people. He left school to work on the MV Tofua, a Banana Boat and began to learn about the Pacific, something he is still doing.

About Campus Press
Campus Press is the biggest academic press outside the universities in New Zealand. It was established in 1992 and for the last twelve years has been based in Palmerston North. Campus Press mostly supplies libraries.

Papers on Social Work, 4th Edition follows other releases in 2010 like Takutai: the Foreshore and Seabed, New Zealand’s most topical book with implications for US, European and other coastlines. ISBN 978-1-877229-46-6 See the attachment for the cover.



Takutai, the foreshore and seabed by Peter Cleave gives an historical background and then an analysis of the 2004 Foreshore and Seabed Act and the 2009 Ministerial Review. There is a wide range of examples of co-governance and co-management by iwi and councils of the foreshore and seabed from around Aotearoa/New Zealand. International case studies are also given. The Conclusion sets the scene for the Repeal of the Act and the introduction of new legislation in 2010.

What the critics had to say about the advance article;

one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. …an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Professor Paul Moon

Takutai costs 57.00NZD from Campus Press with a 7.50 NZD freight charge no matter how big the order.

Order by return email using the Order Form at the bottom of this email if you like.

 

Full Review of Peter Cleave’s Ten Volume Set

By Paul Moon

July 2009

The very nature of academic publishing is that it serves a niche market, and in a country as small as New Zealand, that niche can be so narrow that some books probably never see the light of day because they are simply uneconomic to produce. So when a ten-volume set of books is released, written by Professor Peter Cleave – one of New Zealand’s respected academics – attention is bound to be aroused by the scale of the venture, and by the promise of a substantial body of content.

The work’s opening volume comprises a collection of articles, some of which are new, and some of which are revised versions of existing articles that Cleave has written or presented. The relevancy of the work is underscored by the first paper, which contains suggested options for dealing with the vexed issue of the Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004. The Government has indicated that it will reach some conclusions on this matter within the next two months, but regardless of what is decided, it will be interesting to see the extent to which Cleave’s recommendations are reflected in Government policy, and for academics to debate some of the themes raised long after any settlement has been made at a political level. This article stands out as being the most detailed in this volume, and certainly one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. For this piece alone, the first volume in this collection makes an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Other articles in this volume focus on issues surrounding Maori language – its survival, its transition from an oral to a written language, and its re-emergence as an oral and written language. To this is added a highly original and possibly even provocative piece on conceptual interpretations of pa; a reflection on issues associated with the 1981 Springbok rugby tour to New Zealand, and concludes with a series of brief but brilliant articles which tackle a variety of culturally-charged concepts, and which, among much else, challenge the reader’s understanding of meanings associated with them.

From a collection of articles, Cleave then provides in the second volume of this collection a book. Starting points? A discussion of contemporary Maori society and culture, is primarily about New Zealand historiography, into which is injected a broad range of arguments and perspectives relating to issues such as culture, identity, tradition and modernity, and the media. One of the great strengths of this volume is the extent to which Cleave is able to draw on international material and examples to illuminate his arguments, without the reader ever getting the sense that he is being overwhelmed by comparative examples from other countries. It is a difficult balance to establish, but when handled as masterfully as in Starting Points? The benefits are immediately apparent. The theme of literacy raised in the first volume reappears briefly in this one, but in a substantially different context, with a strong connection with the way in which history works in cultures that had/have strong oral components. In the central sections of this volume is a series of analyses of the works of other writers, in which Cleave adopts the format of quoting passages from articles, and then providing a commentary on them. This is an approach to criticism that is too seldom utilised. In the case of this volume, it has enabled Cleave to deconstruct and then reconstruct ideas and themes, using these sources as interchangeable building blocks – able to be assembled in a variety of forms according to the writer’s perspectives.

Following on from Starting Points? is the third edition of one of Cleave’s seminal works: Rangahau pae iti kahurangi: Research in a small world of light and shade. This work, on themes and approaches to research in a broadly Maori context, has become a recommended text book for many tertiary course around the country, and draws heavily on traditional concepts of learning and understanding as part of the basis for one of the frameworks of research. The traditional is not closed off from critique, however, and Cleave’s great strength in this area is his ability to combine an in-depth cultural knowledge with recent scholarship on research, producing insightful and useful conclusions for anyone engaged in this area of study.

Another third edition in this collection is Papers on Social Work. His volume is made up of seven papers dealing with subjects from the more standard ones, such as ethics, to the some unlikely choices, such as the city space and social work, and the thematically-related article on places of inquiry. Yet, whether predictable or otherwise, Cleave brings new insights and challenging perspectives to the reader. Even the most experienced social work practitioner would be bound to have the perceptions of their profession augmented as a result of reading this book and absorbing some of its ideas.

Papers on Social Work is followed by the 244-page volume Papers on Language. Made up of thirteen articles, this work has Cleave again drawing on a useful quantity of international scholarship, and revealing why he is so highly-regarded in the academic community. There are too few writers in this country capable of combining material from so many different disciplines and in a way that produces such a wide variety of perspectives. Again, there is some material here that appears elsewhere, but its precise employment this volume avoids any sense of repetition. A few of the shorter articles in this volume would be suited mainly for teachers of te reo, but otherwise, the tenor of the works as a whole is well-suited to the general academic reader.

The next book in this collection is the 197-page What do we know about the mark on the wall? Images, rules and prior knowledge. As for its subject, Cleave opens with the teasing line: ‘As the author I still have difficulty saying what his book is about’. But rather than answer with a pithy summary, Cleave allows the ideas contained in this work to speak for themselves – no more, no less. Themes about the meaning of ideas, place, and memory compete with topics on historiography, sociolinguistics, and social geography, among many others. This is probably the most challenging book in the collection. Cleave moves, sometimes with great speed, from one topic to another, often leaving just hints of whole new areas of potential exploration. The reader might feel settled with an idea, and then in the next paragraph, Cleave might challenge that idea from several angles, before hauling the topic elsewhere, with a series of careful thematic links. There is no stated topic for this book, and nor ought there to be. It is like a rhapsody, with different motifs surfacing at various points, connected by very little at times, yet, at the conclusion, it all seems to have a link of sorts to the idea of knowledge. This is possibly one of the most satisfying yet challenging works in the collection.

Te Pu Tapere- the impulse to perform, formerly known as Depot Takirua, is the third edition of this work, and focuses mainly on the electronic media. At 204 pages, it is as substantial a work as any of its companion volumes in this collection, and for those studying film and television in New Zealand, it would be indispensible. This most certainly ought to be a prescribed text for all media students. The portrayal of Maori in film and television comes in for close scrutiny here, and Cleave seizes on several deficiencies and stereotypes in the way culture is presented in popular culture. The chapter on Jane Campion’s The Piano is one of the outstanding portions of this book, and as all the other chapters, offers insights that hitherto have not been available to readers interested in these areas of study. Some of the essays in this work date back to the 1990s, but have been revised where appropriate to maintain their currency.

Iwi Station: A Discussion of Print, Radio, Television, and the Internet in Aotearoa/ New Zealand also has a string media focus, as the title suggests. However, in keeping with the general approach of the other volumes in this collection, Cleave has added elements of history, sociology, and anthropology into the mix. And instead of merely being descriptive about the topics he has chosen, Cleave continually probes and questions to elicit deeper meanings behind them. This is most certainly a text that should be compulsory reading for every journalist and person involved in the media in New Zealand. In particular, it lifts the lid on the sorts of conceptual developments in thought that have led to the status the media currently has in New Zealand.

This collection, coming out as a single set, is unique in New Zealand academic writing. But the format and quantity side, the lasting value of these works is in the ideas they express and the changes in perception that they will bring about for the reader. Cleave deserves full praise for the contribution he has made in these works to the intellectual conversation about New Zealandness.

Paul Moon is Professor of History at Te Ara Poutama, the faculty of Maori Development at AUT University.

There are ten books in the basic Campus Press set. All of these are 200 pages or more in length. Terms of Trade are that the books are available from Campus Press for 57.00 NZD as individual titles or for 400.00 NZD for the Collection.

An Order Form is copied below. To order simply copy the send it by return to this email.

Terms of trade are $57.00 to Campus Press. There is a $7.50 Post and Package cost no matter how big the order is.

Titles and ISBN numbers are below;

978-1-877229-35-0 Aotearoa, papers of contest, Third Edition

978-1-877229-32-9 Maori Unpacked Second Edition

978-1-877229-37-4 Iwi Station Second Edition

978-1-877229-39-8 Papers on Language Third Edition

978-1-877229-42-8 Papers on Social Work Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi Third Edition

978-1-877229-44-2 What do we know about the mark on the wall Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Te Pu Tapere- the Impulse to perform, formerly titled, From the Depot Takirua, Third Edition

978-1-877229-41-1 Papers to conference Fourth Edition

978-1-877229-38-1 Starting Points


Campus Press


Order Form


Purchaser's Order Number.....


Please send us a copy or copies of

1 Aotearoa, Papers of Contest, Third Edition, Peter
Cleave x....

2 Papers to Conference, Fouth Edition Peter Cleave x.....
3 Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition, Peter
Cleave x....

4 Te Pu Tapere, the impulse to perform, Peter
Cleave x…

5 Papers on Language, Third Edition, Peter Cleave x...

6 What do we know about the mark on the wall? Third Edition, Peter Cleave x...

7 Iwi Station, a discussion of print, radio and television in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Peter Cleave x

8 Maori Unpacked, Peter Cleave x...

9 Starting Points, a discussion of contemporary Maori culture and society, Peter Cleave x...

10 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi, research in a small world of light and shade,
Peter Cleave x...

11 Takutai; the foreshore and seabed x...

12 Ten Volumes, a Collection by Peter Cleave x.....


Please send these books to;

Attention

puff 514

The London on George Street is now open. Great to see the Mayor there at the opening. Go Jono! Three hours was a long time for one Peter Cleave to be playing the guitar and singing though!

Split Pin Engineering Rocks!
Safe and Sound Locksmiths Rule!

puff is a daily spin on what is going on. For example the Hotaka says what is happening today on the radio and puts this in context for the month.
puff is sponsored by Campus Press and the Campus Press Update follows below.
What else is happening? Get back to us via the Comments section of this Blog!
Aotearoa Waka question of the day;
Is it worth having a Labour government in Aistralia at the mercy of a couple of loose wheels aka Independents?
Saying of the week
Humans say that time passes
Time says that humans pass
Rugby File
Counties Manukau beat Tasman. And beat them well. Full marks to Tana Umaga and the coaching staff at Counties Manukau. A disappointing result though for Tasman who have shown determination in earlier games.
Draft Upfdate
'Maori have duty to fund their own,' says Fran O'Sullivan in the Saturday Herald- this story will be updated as the week goes by. Editors comments in brackets below.

(Is Fran O’Sullivan just rabbiting on in the right wing corner or does she represent a deeper undercurrent of feeling? Is Fran foreshadowing the way Treasury thinks and might act? She works off a stock of iwi bashing questions and rounds up the usual suspects but the mere fact that her article is given serious space in the New Zealand Herald shows that it has some editorial significance or support)

‘Mute response to Minister’s call for iwi to support abused kids grates, given growing level of tribal wealth’, says Fran’s sub heading.

(O’Sullivan sets out the distinction between iwi and state in her opening paragraph. And then there is the inversion not emphasized by Fran O’Sullivan; Paula Bennett is, like Winston Peters, a Maori advocate for the state. A Maori Minister of the Crown is berating leaders of Maori tribes, some Maori wear the iwi hat and some like Bennett and Peters in his day wear the state hat.)

The Maori aristocracy has turned a deaf ear to Paula Bennett’s plea to them to stump up some of their own cash so abused kids could be placed in iwi rather than state care.

(In her next paragraph she takes iwi leaders to task for being tardy or indolent.)

True to form, the tribal leaders haven’t bothered themselves sufficiently to make a collective response to Bennett. (Although her office says she is going to explain her proposals further at the invitation of some individual iwi.)

(Then it is a matter of establishing that the iwi owe the government money. Are Treaty Settlements ‘found money’ or are there strings attached?)

The young Cabinet minister went up in my estimation with her blunt message to the iwi leaders’ group to ‘put your hands in your own pockets’ to help find families who could take on children from their own iwi’ because the government doesn’t have the money for it now quite frankly’.

(Next the Key government is accused of being craven and the claim by Maori for the foreshore and seabed as corrupt.)

After months of the Key government’s craven behavior towards all things which Maori are corruptly claiming as theirs- like the prized and mineral- rich foreshore and seabed which we all own as Kiwis- it was refreshing to see a Cabinet minister give the tribal chiefs a rev-up.

(Then it is the Maori professor as space cadet. This calls into question the scholarship of Treaty claims and the general sociology and anthropology of race relations. The idea is that these academics live in a one dimensional world and this is usually hard anyway but in a small society like New Zealand it is very difficult).

Ngati Kahu Chairwoman Professor Margaret Mutu- one of the more disturbingly remote leaders- said Bennett’s suggestion that iwi provide funding and resources was ridiculous.
‘We can’t. We don’t have them. It’s a state responsibility. We know how bad it is. We know the helplessness and hopelessness of it, and that we are the only ones who can save ourselves. But we also need resources and the support of the state to do that.’

(The notion of ‘disturbingly remote’runs into the idea of psychological problems touching on pathology as Fran O’Sullivan accuses Mutu showing ‘learned helplessness’ and suggests that she is elitist. The underlying idea in the elitist suggestion is that Treaty Settlement money goes into education which promotes an the children of an elite but does nothing for people at risk.)

This display of ‘learned helplessness’ from a university professor is deeply worrying. Or does Mutu cling to an outdated belief that only tribal elites- like herself- are capable of bettering themselves?

(Then O’Sullivan sets out the idea of a game, a double game where Maori tribal leaders are trying to gaet a priveliged position as far as the ownership of assets now vested in the state are concerned while they have their own assets through Treaty of Waitangi settlements. They are, Fran O’Suillivan seems to be suggesting, playing poor when it comes to state assets while in fact Maori are collectively rich.)

I very much doubt it. Mutu is one of eight tribal chairs who are very much focused on playing a double game to get ownership of a considerable lump of those assets that are either owned by the Crown on behalf of all New Zealanders- such as the foreshore and seabed-or are tucked up in state owned enterprises. Or have yet to roll off the Government’s drawing boards.

( Fran O’Sullivan is suggesting that Maori are building their way into the state.)

It is indeed true that child-abuse deaths for Maori were on a par with the rest of New Zealand in the mid 1980s. It is also true that Maori jobs vanished out of this economy as the 1980s Labour government demolished the railways, post office and forestry departments of that era.

(Fran O’Sullivan seems to not want to overstate things here. In fact there is something of a ‘negative sovereignty’ happening where Maori are in the majority in prisons and elsewhere in the justice system.)

But the Treaty of Waitangi settlements have also ensured a considerable shift of cash and assets into tribal hands since that time.

A couple of weeks ago I listened as the head of Ngai Tahu’s property company told a bunch of fascinated infrastructure investors how the South Island tribe had grown its portfolio from $2 million to $450 million since 1994.

Tony Sewell (a Pakeha) presented on Ngai Tahu’s behalf because its chairman Mark Solomon, pulled out at the last minute.

The basic gist was that Maori were- contrary to myth-making-relatively rich at the collective level. Maori equity could be as much as $25 billion although much of it was passive investments tied up in trusts.

Ngai Tahu was itself focused on building an inter-generational portfolio. Their perspective was a 50 to 200 year horizon.. But the aim was to have $1billion under management within a relatively short space of time.

Maori were a pivotal part of ‘New Zealand Inc’- major shareholders in dairy giant Fonterra, pastoral farming and the fishing industry and about to be in the preferred position when this government gets around to selling the deals on public-private partnerships.

‘Collective capitalism is the future, it is our past, it will deliver our potential and now is the hour’ was the mantra on the forum’s website when it hosted yet another gabfest on how Maori can become major infrastructure investors in New Zealand.

Don’t get me wrong here.

(Fran O’Sullivan goes on to talk about or at least hint at entrenchment. This is when Maori have automatic first cut at something as a given or entrenched right.)

I am not against Maori having a slice of the pie. What I don’t like is the notion which is increasingly prevalent in government departments that Maori should be in some sort of preferred position because the assets- whether new infrastructure or a slice of an existing Government asset- will always remain in New Zealand ownership and be held for the longer term.

The message Maori are making to the smart money is this; pony up with us if you want a slice of the Government pie. At a superficial level- the same level which persuaded the Cabinet that our foreshore and seabed should be confiscated by statute and tucked into nebulous public domain-this is attractive.
It enables ministers to free up some cash for other purposes knowing that they have some inbuilt cheerleaders in the form of Maori who will clearly be in accord with any move that is in their commercial interest.

The play with long and short or immediate term is a significant part of this analysis.
In her last paragraph Fran O’Sullivan seems to be querying the very leadership of the tribal leaders group. The accusation seems to be that these leaders are not acting responsibly with regard to their own communities. If Maori are as rich or richer collectively speaking than others in the population of New Zealand then action by them to help people in their own communities ought to be forthcoming)
It’s obvious that Maori are playing a very long term inter-generational game. But it is time Solomon, Mutu et al took their eyes off the asset grab and exerted some leadership in the interests of the current Maori generation.

SO THERE READERS- WHAT DO YOU THINK OF FRAN'S COMMENTS?


Papers on Social Work 4th Edition by Peter Cleave has been released by Campus Press, There is a discussion of Whanau Ora the New Zealand government's strategy for social work announced in April-May 2010. There is a revisiting of the theme of restorative justice. All this and the classic, prize winning essays on social work education and value systems that have made Papers on Social Work one of the best selling books in the Campus Press set, internationally and locally.


Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition has the ISBN
978-1-877229-47-3

NZD 60.00 including tax plus 7.50 Post and Pack no matter how big the order.

Payment COD into nominated account.

Delivery within a month.

Order through comment or email to puffmedia@yahoo.co.nz using the Order Form at the bottom of this email.

About the author.
It is said that Peter Cleave has more books in New Zealand Libraries than any other author. Beginning as a collaborator on The Oxford Picture Dictionary of Maori in 1979 there has been a consistent pattern of a book published, an article in a referred journal and then a radio commentary repeated over a long period. With this pattern of published work have come the prizes; the First Class Masterate from Auckland University and a Commonwealth scholarship to the University of Oxford, the Phillip Bagby Scholarship and Rhodes Foundation funds while doing the Oxford Doctorate, the chair of the college common room and on from these to taking the prizes for best paper at conferences like the International Federation of Social Workers in Montreal in 2000.

Peter Cleave is without peer at the meeting place of language, culture and criticism, locally and internationally and this is seen in the sale of his books to libraries in New Zealand and Australia and around the world.

At the same time Peter Cleave, a former captain of the Manurewa High School First Fifteen in South Auckland, works on community radio and touches base with working people. He left school to work on the MV Tofua, a Banana Boat and began to learn about the Pacific, something he is still doing.

About Campus Press
Campus Press is the biggest academic press outside the universities in New Zealand. It was established in 1992 and for the last twelve years has been based in Palmerston North. Campus Press mostly supplies libraries.

Papers on Social Work, 4th Edition follows other releases in 2010 like Takutai: the Foreshore and Seabed, New Zealand’s most topical book with implications for US, European and other coastlines. ISBN 978-1-877229-46-6 See the attachment for the cover.



Takutai, the foreshore and seabed by Peter Cleave gives an historical background and then an analysis of the 2004 Foreshore and Seabed Act and the 2009 Ministerial Review. There is a wide range of examples of co-governance and co-management by iwi and councils of the foreshore and seabed from around Aotearoa/New Zealand. International case studies are also given. The Conclusion sets the scene for the Repeal of the Act and the introduction of new legislation in 2010.

What the critics had to say about the advance article;

one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. …an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Professor Paul Moon

Takutai costs 57.00NZD from Campus Press with a 7.50 NZD freight charge no matter how big the order.

Order by return email using the Order Form at the bottom of this email if you like.

 

Full Review of Peter Cleave’s Ten Volume Set

By Paul Moon

July 2009

The very nature of academic publishing is that it serves a niche market, and in a country as small as New Zealand, that niche can be so narrow that some books probably never see the light of day because they are simply uneconomic to produce. So when a ten-volume set of books is released, written by Professor Peter Cleave – one of New Zealand’s respected academics – attention is bound to be aroused by the scale of the venture, and by the promise of a substantial body of content.

The work’s opening volume comprises a collection of articles, some of which are new, and some of which are revised versions of existing articles that Cleave has written or presented. The relevancy of the work is underscored by the first paper, which contains suggested options for dealing with the vexed issue of the Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004. The Government has indicated that it will reach some conclusions on this matter within the next two months, but regardless of what is decided, it will be interesting to see the extent to which Cleave’s recommendations are reflected in Government policy, and for academics to debate some of the themes raised long after any settlement has been made at a political level. This article stands out as being the most detailed in this volume, and certainly one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. For this piece alone, the first volume in this collection makes an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Other articles in this volume focus on issues surrounding Maori language – its survival, its transition from an oral to a written language, and its re-emergence as an oral and written language. To this is added a highly original and possibly even provocative piece on conceptual interpretations of pa; a reflection on issues associated with the 1981 Springbok rugby tour to New Zealand, and concludes with a series of brief but brilliant articles which tackle a variety of culturally-charged concepts, and which, among much else, challenge the reader’s understanding of meanings associated with them.

From a collection of articles, Cleave then provides in the second volume of this collection a book. Starting points? A discussion of contemporary Maori society and culture, is primarily about New Zealand historiography, into which is injected a broad range of arguments and perspectives relating to issues such as culture, identity, tradition and modernity, and the media. One of the great strengths of this volume is the extent to which Cleave is able to draw on international material and examples to illuminate his arguments, without the reader ever getting the sense that he is being overwhelmed by comparative examples from other countries. It is a difficult balance to establish, but when handled as masterfully as in Starting Points? The benefits are immediately apparent. The theme of literacy raised in the first volume reappears briefly in this one, but in a substantially different context, with a strong connection with the way in which history works in cultures that had/have strong oral components. In the central sections of this volume is a series of analyses of the works of other writers, in which Cleave adopts the format of quoting passages from articles, and then providing a commentary on them. This is an approach to criticism that is too seldom utilised. In the case of this volume, it has enabled Cleave to deconstruct and then reconstruct ideas and themes, using these sources as interchangeable building blocks – able to be assembled in a variety of forms according to the writer’s perspectives.

Following on from Starting Points? is the third edition of one of Cleave’s seminal works: Rangahau pae iti kahurangi: Research in a small world of light and shade. This work, on themes and approaches to research in a broadly Maori context, has become a recommended text book for many tertiary course around the country, and draws heavily on traditional concepts of learning and understanding as part of the basis for one of the frameworks of research. The traditional is not closed off from critique, however, and Cleave’s great strength in this area is his ability to combine an in-depth cultural knowledge with recent scholarship on research, producing insightful and useful conclusions for anyone engaged in this area of study.

Another third edition in this collection is Papers on Social Work. His volume is made up of seven papers dealing with subjects from the more standard ones, such as ethics, to the some unlikely choices, such as the city space and social work, and the thematically-related article on places of inquiry. Yet, whether predictable or otherwise, Cleave brings new insights and challenging perspectives to the reader. Even the most experienced social work practitioner would be bound to have the perceptions of their profession augmented as a result of reading this book and absorbing some of its ideas.

Papers on Social Work is followed by the 244-page volume Papers on Language. Made up of thirteen articles, this work has Cleave again drawing on a useful quantity of international scholarship, and revealing why he is so highly-regarded in the academic community. There are too few writers in this country capable of combining material from so many different disciplines and in a way that produces such a wide variety of perspectives. Again, there is some material here that appears elsewhere, but its precise employment this volume avoids any sense of repetition. A few of the shorter articles in this volume would be suited mainly for teachers of te reo, but otherwise, the tenor of the works as a whole is well-suited to the general academic reader.

The next book in this collection is the 197-page What do we know about the mark on the wall? Images, rules and prior knowledge. As for its subject, Cleave opens with the teasing line: ‘As the author I still have difficulty saying what his book is about’. But rather than answer with a pithy summary, Cleave allows the ideas contained in this work to speak for themselves – no more, no less. Themes about the meaning of ideas, place, and memory compete with topics on historiography, sociolinguistics, and social geography, among many others. This is probably the most challenging book in the collection. Cleave moves, sometimes with great speed, from one topic to another, often leaving just hints of whole new areas of potential exploration. The reader might feel settled with an idea, and then in the next paragraph, Cleave might challenge that idea from several angles, before hauling the topic elsewhere, with a series of careful thematic links. There is no stated topic for this book, and nor ought there to be. It is like a rhapsody, with different motifs surfacing at various points, connected by very little at times, yet, at the conclusion, it all seems to have a link of sorts to the idea of knowledge. This is possibly one of the most satisfying yet challenging works in the collection.

Te Pu Tapere- the impulse to perform, formerly known as Depot Takirua, is the third edition of this work, and focuses mainly on the electronic media. At 204 pages, it is as substantial a work as any of its companion volumes in this collection, and for those studying film and television in New Zealand, it would be indispensible. This most certainly ought to be a prescribed text for all media students. The portrayal of Maori in film and television comes in for close scrutiny here, and Cleave seizes on several deficiencies and stereotypes in the way culture is presented in popular culture. The chapter on Jane Campion’s The Piano is one of the outstanding portions of this book, and as all the other chapters, offers insights that hitherto have not been available to readers interested in these areas of study. Some of the essays in this work date back to the 1990s, but have been revised where appropriate to maintain their currency.

Iwi Station: A Discussion of Print, Radio, Television, and the Internet in Aotearoa/ New Zealand also has a string media focus, as the title suggests. However, in keeping with the general approach of the other volumes in this collection, Cleave has added elements of history, sociology, and anthropology into the mix. And instead of merely being descriptive about the topics he has chosen, Cleave continually probes and questions to elicit deeper meanings behind them. This is most certainly a text that should be compulsory reading for every journalist and person involved in the media in New Zealand. In particular, it lifts the lid on the sorts of conceptual developments in thought that have led to the status the media currently has in New Zealand.

This collection, coming out as a single set, is unique in New Zealand academic writing. But the format and quantity side, the lasting value of these works is in the ideas they express and the changes in perception that they will bring about for the reader. Cleave deserves full praise for the contribution he has made in these works to the intellectual conversation about New Zealandness.

Paul Moon is Professor of History at Te Ara Poutama, the faculty of Maori Development at AUT University.

There are ten books in the basic Campus Press set. All of these are 200 pages or more in length. Terms of Trade are that the books are available from Campus Press for 57.00 NZD as individual titles or for 400.00 NZD for the Collection.

An Order Form is copied below. To order simply copy the send it by return to this email.

Terms of trade are $57.00 to Campus Press. There is a $7.50 Post and Package cost no matter how big the order is.

Titles and ISBN numbers are below;

978-1-877229-35-0 Aotearoa, papers of contest, Third Edition

978-1-877229-32-9 Maori Unpacked Second Edition

978-1-877229-37-4 Iwi Station Second Edition

978-1-877229-39-8 Papers on Language Third Edition

978-1-877229-42-8 Papers on Social Work Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi Third Edition

978-1-877229-44-2 What do we know about the mark on the wall Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Te Pu Tapere- the Impulse to perform, formerly titled, From the Depot Takirua, Third Edition

978-1-877229-41-1 Papers to conference Fourth Edition

978-1-877229-38-1 Starting Points


Campus Press


Order Form


Purchaser's Order Number.....


Please send us a copy or copies of

1 Aotearoa, Papers of Contest, Third Edition, Peter
Cleave x....

2 Papers to Conference, Fouth Edition Peter Cleave x.....
3 Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition, Peter
Cleave x....

4 Te Pu Tapere, the impulse to perform, Peter
Cleave x…

5 Papers on Language, Third Edition, Peter Cleave x...

6 What do we know about the mark on the wall? Third Edition, Peter Cleave x...

7 Iwi Station, a discussion of print, radio and television in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Peter Cleave x

8 Maori Unpacked, Peter Cleave x...

9 Starting Points, a discussion of contemporary Maori culture and society, Peter Cleave x...

10 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi, research in a small world of light and shade,
Peter Cleave x...

11 Takutai; the foreshore and seabed x...

12 Ten Volumes, a Collection by Peter Cleave x.....


Please send these books to;

Attention

puff 513

Split Pin Engineering Rocks!
Safe and Sound Locksmiths Rule!

This is a daily spin on what is going on. For example the Hotaka says what is happening today on the radio and puts this in context for the month.
puff is sponsored by Campus Press and the Campus Press Update follows below.
What else is happening? Get back to us via the Comments section of this Blog!

Saying of the week
Humans say that time passes
Time says that humans pass
Aotearoa Waka question of the day
What is Celia Lashlie trying to tell us about the role of the mother and the actions of CYF?'
Rugby
Counties Manukau could have done better against Waikato but they lost their way. And Waikato found their way back to form on their home ground.
Feature Story
Maori have duty to fund their own,' says Fran O'Sullivan in the Saturday Herald- this story will be updated as the week goes by. Editors comments in brackets below.

(Is Fran O’Sullivan just rabbiting on in the right wing corner or does she represent a deeper undercurrent of feeling? She works off a stock of iwi bashing questions and rounds up the usual suspects but the mere fact that her article is given serious space in the New Zealand Herald shows that it has some editorial significance or support)

Mute response to Minister’s call for iwi to support abused kids grates, given growing level of tribal wealth says Fran.

(O’Sullivan sets out the distinction between iwi and state in her opening paragraph. And then there is the inversion; Paula Bennett is, like Winston Peters, a Maori advocate for the state)

The Maori aristocracy has turned a deaf ear to Paula Bennett’s plea to them to stump up some of their own cash so abused kids could be placed in iwi rather than state care.

(In her next paragraph she takes iwi leaders to task for being tardy or indolent.)

True to form, the tribal leaders haven’t bothered themselves sufficiently to make a collective response to Bennett. (Although her office says she is going to explain her proposals further at the invitation of some individual iwi.)

(Then it is a matter of establishing that the iwi owe the government money. Are Treaty Settlements ‘found money’ or are there strings attached?)
The young Cabinet minister went up in my estimation with her blunt message to the iwi leaders’ group to ‘put your hands in your own pockets’ to help find families who could take on children from their own iwi’ because the government doesn’t have the money for it now quite frankly’.

(Next the Key government is accused of being craven and the claim by Maori for the foreshore and seabed as corrupt.)

After months of the Key government’s craven behavior towards all things which Maori are corruptly claiming as theirs- like the prized and mineral- rich foreshore and seabed which we all own as Kiwis- it was refreshing to see a Cabinet minister give the tribal chiefs a rev-up.

(Then it is the Maori professor as space cadet. This calls into question the scholarship of Treaty claims and the general sociology and anthropology of race relations. The idea is that these academics live in a one dimensional world and this is usually hard anyway but in a small society like New Zealand it is very difficult).

Ngati Kahu Chairwoman Professor Margaret Mutu- one of the more disturbingly remote leaders- said Bennett’s suggestion that iwi provide funding and resources was ridiculous.
‘We can’t. We don’t have them. It’s a state responsibility. We know how bad it is. We know the helplessness and hopelessness of it, and that we are the only ones who can save ourselves. But we also need resources and the support of the state to do that.’
(The notion of ‘disturbingly remote’runs into the idea of psychological problems touching on pathology as Fran O’Sullivan accuses Mutu showing ‘learned helplessness’ and suggests that she is elitist. The underlying idea in the elitist suggestion is that Treaty Settlement money goes into education which promotes an the children of an elite but does nothing for people at risk).
This display of ‘learned helplessness’ from a university professor is deeply worrying. Or does Mutu cling to an outdated belief that only tribal elites- like herself- are capable of bettering themselves?

(Then O’Sullivan sets out the idea of a game.)

I very much doubt it. Mutu is one of eight tribal chairs who are very much focused on playing a double game to get ownership of a considerable lump of those assets that are either owned by the Crown on behalf of all New Zealanders- such as the foreshore and seabed-or are tucked up in state owned enterprises. Or have yet to roll off the Government’s drawing boards.
( Fran O’Sullivan is suggesting that Maori are building their way into the state.)
It is indeed true that child-abuse deaths for Maori were on a par with the rest of New Zealand in the mid 1980s. It is also true that Maori jobs vanished out of this economy as the 1980s Labour government demolished the railways, post office and forestry departments of that era.

(Fran O’Sullivan seems to not want to overstate things here. In fact there is something of a ‘negative sovereignty’ happening where Maori are in the majority in prisons and elsewhere in the justice system.)

But the Treaty of Waitangi settlements have also ensured a considerable shift of cash and assets into tribal hands since that time.

A couple of weeks ago I listened as the head of Ngai Tahu’s property company told a bunch of fascinated infrastructure investors how the South Island tribe had grown its portfolio from $2 million to $450 million since 1994.

Tony Sewell (a Pakeha) presented on Ngai Tahu’s behalf because its chairman Mark Solomon, pulled out at the last minute.

The basic gist was that Maori were- contrary to myth-making-relatively rich at the collective level. Maori equity could be as much as $25 billion although much of it was passive investments tied up in trusts.

Ngai Tahu was itself focused on building an inter-generational portfolio. Their perspective was a 50 to 200 year horizon.. But the aim was to have $1billion under management within a relatively short space of time.

Maori were a pivotal part of ‘New Zealand Inc’- major shareholders in dairy giant Fonterra, pastoral farming and the fishing industry and about to be in the preferred position when this government gets around to selling the deals on public-private partnerships.

‘Collective capitalism is the future, it is our past, it will deliver our potential and now is the hour’ was the mantra on the forum’s website when it hosted yet another gabfest on how Maori can become major infrastructure investors in New Zealand.

Don’t get me wrong here.
(Fran O’Sullivan goes on to talk about entrenchment.)
I am not against Maori having a slice of the pie. What I don’t like is the notion which is increasingly prevalent in government departments that Maori should be in some sort of preferred position because the assets- whether new infrastructure or a slice of an existing Government asset- will always remain in New Zealand ownership and be held for the longer term.

The message Maori are making to the smart money is this; pony up with us if you want a slice of the Government pie. At a superficial level- the same level which persuaded the Cabinet that our foreshore and seabed should be confiscated by statute and tucked into nebulous public domain-this is attractive.
It enables ministers to free up some cash for other purposes knowing that they have some inbuilt cheerleaders in the form of Maori who will clearly be in accord with any move that is in their commercial interest.

The play with long and short or immediate term is a significant part of this analysis.

It’s obvious that Maori are playing a very long term inter-generational game. But it is time Solomon, Mutu et al took their eyes off the asset grab and exerted some leadership in the interests of the current Maori generation.

SO THERE READERS- WHAT DO YOU THINK OF FRAN'S COMMENTS?
Papers on Social Work 4th Edition by Peter Cleave has been released by Campus Press, There is a discussion of Whanau Ora the New Zealand government's strategy for social work announced in April-May 2010. There is a revisiting of the theme of restorative justice. All this and the classic, prize winning essays on social work education and value systems that have made Papers on Social Work one of the best selling books in the Campus Press set, internationally and locally.


Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition has the ISBN
978-1-877229-47-3

NZD 60.00 including tax plus 7.50 Post and Pack no matter how big the order.

Payment COD into nominated account.

Delivery within a month.

Order through comment or email to puffmedia@yahoo.co.nz using the Order Form at the bottom of this email.

About the author.
It is said that Peter Cleave has more books in New Zealand Libraries than any other author. Beginning as a collaborator on The Oxford Picture Dictionary of Maori in 1979 there has been a consistent pattern of a book published, an article in a referred journal and then a radio commentary repeated over a long period. With this pattern of published work have come the prizes; the First Class Masterate from Auckland University and a Commonwealth scholarship to the University of Oxford, the Phillip Bagby Scholarship and Rhodes Foundation funds while doing the Oxford Doctorate, the chair of the college common room and on from these to taking the prizes for best paper at conferences like the International Federation of Social Workers in Montreal in 2000.

Peter Cleave is without peer at the meeting place of language, culture and criticism, locally and internationally and this is seen in the sale of his books to libraries in New Zealand and Australia and around the world.

At the same time Peter Cleave, a former captain of the Manurewa High School First Fifteen in South Auckland, works on community radio and touches base with working people. He left school to work on the MV Tofua, a Banana Boat and began to learn about the Pacific, something he is still doing.

About Campus Press
Campus Press is the biggest academic press outside the universities in New Zealand. It was established in 1992 and for the last twelve years has been based in Palmerston North. Campus Press mostly supplies libraries.

Papers on Social Work, 4th Edition follows other releases in 2010 like Takutai: the Foreshore and Seabed, New Zealand’s most topical book with implications for US, European and other coastlines. ISBN 978-1-877229-46-6 See the attachment for the cover.



Takutai, the foreshore and seabed by Peter Cleave gives an historical background and then an analysis of the 2004 Foreshore and Seabed Act and the 2009 Ministerial Review. There is a wide range of examples of co-governance and co-management by iwi and councils of the foreshore and seabed from around Aotearoa/New Zealand. International case studies are also given. The Conclusion sets the scene for the Repeal of the Act and the introduction of new legislation in 2010.

What the critics had to say about the advance article;

one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. …an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Professor Paul Moon

Takutai costs 57.00NZD from Campus Press with a 7.50 NZD freight charge no matter how big the order.

Order by return email using the Order Form at the bottom of this email if you like.

 

Full Review of Peter Cleave’s Ten Volume Set

By Paul Moon

July 2009

The very nature of academic publishing is that it serves a niche market, and in a country as small as New Zealand, that niche can be so narrow that some books probably never see the light of day because they are simply uneconomic to produce. So when a ten-volume set of books is released, written by Professor Peter Cleave – one of New Zealand’s respected academics – attention is bound to be aroused by the scale of the venture, and by the promise of a substantial body of content.

The work’s opening volume comprises a collection of articles, some of which are new, and some of which are revised versions of existing articles that Cleave has written or presented. The relevancy of the work is underscored by the first paper, which contains suggested options for dealing with the vexed issue of the Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004. The Government has indicated that it will reach some conclusions on this matter within the next two months, but regardless of what is decided, it will be interesting to see the extent to which Cleave’s recommendations are reflected in Government policy, and for academics to debate some of the themes raised long after any settlement has been made at a political level. This article stands out as being the most detailed in this volume, and certainly one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. For this piece alone, the first volume in this collection makes an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Other articles in this volume focus on issues surrounding Maori language – its survival, its transition from an oral to a written language, and its re-emergence as an oral and written language. To this is added a highly original and possibly even provocative piece on conceptual interpretations of pa; a reflection on issues associated with the 1981 Springbok rugby tour to New Zealand, and concludes with a series of brief but brilliant articles which tackle a variety of culturally-charged concepts, and which, among much else, challenge the reader’s understanding of meanings associated with them.

From a collection of articles, Cleave then provides in the second volume of this collection a book. Starting points? A discussion of contemporary Maori society and culture, is primarily about New Zealand historiography, into which is injected a broad range of arguments and perspectives relating to issues such as culture, identity, tradition and modernity, and the media. One of the great strengths of this volume is the extent to which Cleave is able to draw on international material and examples to illuminate his arguments, without the reader ever getting the sense that he is being overwhelmed by comparative examples from other countries. It is a difficult balance to establish, but when handled as masterfully as in Starting Points? The benefits are immediately apparent. The theme of literacy raised in the first volume reappears briefly in this one, but in a substantially different context, with a strong connection with the way in which history works in cultures that had/have strong oral components. In the central sections of this volume is a series of analyses of the works of other writers, in which Cleave adopts the format of quoting passages from articles, and then providing a commentary on them. This is an approach to criticism that is too seldom utilised. In the case of this volume, it has enabled Cleave to deconstruct and then reconstruct ideas and themes, using these sources as interchangeable building blocks – able to be assembled in a variety of forms according to the writer’s perspectives.

Following on from Starting Points? is the third edition of one of Cleave’s seminal works: Rangahau pae iti kahurangi: Research in a small world of light and shade. This work, on themes and approaches to research in a broadly Maori context, has become a recommended text book for many tertiary course around the country, and draws heavily on traditional concepts of learning and understanding as part of the basis for one of the frameworks of research. The traditional is not closed off from critique, however, and Cleave’s great strength in this area is his ability to combine an in-depth cultural knowledge with recent scholarship on research, producing insightful and useful conclusions for anyone engaged in this area of study.

Another third edition in this collection is Papers on Social Work. His volume is made up of seven papers dealing with subjects from the more standard ones, such as ethics, to the some unlikely choices, such as the city space and social work, and the thematically-related article on places of inquiry. Yet, whether predictable or otherwise, Cleave brings new insights and challenging perspectives to the reader. Even the most experienced social work practitioner would be bound to have the perceptions of their profession augmented as a result of reading this book and absorbing some of its ideas.

Papers on Social Work is followed by the 244-page volume Papers on Language. Made up of thirteen articles, this work has Cleave again drawing on a useful quantity of international scholarship, and revealing why he is so highly-regarded in the academic community. There are too few writers in this country capable of combining material from so many different disciplines and in a way that produces such a wide variety of perspectives. Again, there is some material here that appears elsewhere, but its precise employment this volume avoids any sense of repetition. A few of the shorter articles in this volume would be suited mainly for teachers of te reo, but otherwise, the tenor of the works as a whole is well-suited to the general academic reader.

The next book in this collection is the 197-page What do we know about the mark on the wall? Images, rules and prior knowledge. As for its subject, Cleave opens with the teasing line: ‘As the author I still have difficulty saying what his book is about’. But rather than answer with a pithy summary, Cleave allows the ideas contained in this work to speak for themselves – no more, no less. Themes about the meaning of ideas, place, and memory compete with topics on historiography, sociolinguistics, and social geography, among many others. This is probably the most challenging book in the collection. Cleave moves, sometimes with great speed, from one topic to another, often leaving just hints of whole new areas of potential exploration. The reader might feel settled with an idea, and then in the next paragraph, Cleave might challenge that idea from several angles, before hauling the topic elsewhere, with a series of careful thematic links. There is no stated topic for this book, and nor ought there to be. It is like a rhapsody, with different motifs surfacing at various points, connected by very little at times, yet, at the conclusion, it all seems to have a link of sorts to the idea of knowledge. This is possibly one of the most satisfying yet challenging works in the collection.

Te Pu Tapere- the impulse to perform, formerly known as Depot Takirua, is the third edition of this work, and focuses mainly on the electronic media. At 204 pages, it is as substantial a work as any of its companion volumes in this collection, and for those studying film and television in New Zealand, it would be indispensible. This most certainly ought to be a prescribed text for all media students. The portrayal of Maori in film and television comes in for close scrutiny here, and Cleave seizes on several deficiencies and stereotypes in the way culture is presented in popular culture. The chapter on Jane Campion’s The Piano is one of the outstanding portions of this book, and as all the other chapters, offers insights that hitherto have not been available to readers interested in these areas of study. Some of the essays in this work date back to the 1990s, but have been revised where appropriate to maintain their currency.

Iwi Station: A Discussion of Print, Radio, Television, and the Internet in Aotearoa/ New Zealand also has a string media focus, as the title suggests. However, in keeping with the general approach of the other volumes in this collection, Cleave has added elements of history, sociology, and anthropology into the mix. And instead of merely being descriptive about the topics he has chosen, Cleave continually probes and questions to elicit deeper meanings behind them. This is most certainly a text that should be compulsory reading for every journalist and person involved in the media in New Zealand. In particular, it lifts the lid on the sorts of conceptual developments in thought that have led to the status the media currently has in New Zealand.

This collection, coming out as a single set, is unique in New Zealand academic writing. But the format and quantity side, the lasting value of these works is in the ideas they express and the changes in perception that they will bring about for the reader. Cleave deserves full praise for the contribution he has made in these works to the intellectual conversation about New Zealandness.

Paul Moon is Professor of History at Te Ara Poutama, the faculty of Maori Development at AUT University.

There are ten books in the basic Campus Press set. All of these are 200 pages or more in length. Terms of Trade are that the books are available from Campus Press for 57.00 NZD as individual titles or for 400.00 NZD for the Collection.

An Order Form is copied below. To order simply copy the send it by return to this email.

Terms of trade are $57.00 to Campus Press. There is a $7.50 Post and Package cost no matter how big the order is.

Titles and ISBN numbers are below;

978-1-877229-35-0 Aotearoa, papers of contest, Third Edition

978-1-877229-32-9 Maori Unpacked Second Edition

978-1-877229-37-4 Iwi Station Second Edition

978-1-877229-39-8 Papers on Language Third Edition

978-1-877229-42-8 Papers on Social Work Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi Third Edition

978-1-877229-44-2 What do we know about the mark on the wall Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Te Pu Tapere- the Impulse to perform, formerly titled, From the Depot Takirua, Third Edition

978-1-877229-41-1 Papers to conference Fourth Edition

978-1-877229-38-1 Starting Points


Campus Press


Order Form


Purchaser's Order Number.....


Please send us a copy or copies of

1 Aotearoa, Papers of Contest, Third Edition, Peter
Cleave x....

2 Papers to Conference, Fouth Edition Peter Cleave x.....
3 Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition, Peter
Cleave x....

4 Te Pu Tapere, the impulse to perform, Peter
Cleave x…

5 Papers on Language, Third Edition, Peter Cleave x...

6 What do we know about the mark on the wall? Third Edition, Peter Cleave x...

7 Iwi Station, a discussion of print, radio and television in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Peter Cleave x

8 Maori Unpacked, Peter Cleave x...

9 Starting Points, a discussion of contemporary Maori culture and society, Peter Cleave x...

10 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi, research in a small world of light and shade,
Peter Cleave x...

11 Takutai; the foreshore and seabed x...

12 Ten Volumes, a Collection by Peter Cleave x.....


Please send these books to;

Attention

puff 512

Saying of the week
Humans say that time passes
Time says that humans pass
Aotearoa Waka question of the day
Where are all the teachers going and why?
Rugby
Bay of Plenty with Mike Delaney back were too good for North Harbour. The guys up front were better organized. Playing at home in Rotorua might have helped.
Media watch
'Maori have duty to fund their own,' says Fran O'Sullivan in the Saturday 28-08-10Herald- this story will be updated as the week goes by. Editors comments in brackets below.

(Is Fran O’Sullivan just rabbiting on in the right wing corner or does she represent a deeper undercurrent of feeling? She works off a stock of iwi bashing questions and rounds up the usual suspects but the mere fact that her article is given serious space in the New Zealand Herald shows that it has some editorial significance or support)

Mute response to Minister’s call for iwi to support abused kids grates, given growing level of tribal wealth says Fran.

(O’Sullivan sets out the distinction between iwi and state in her opening paragraph. And then there is the inversion; Paula Bennett is, like Winston Peters, a Maori advocate for the state)

The Maori aristocracy has turned a deaf ear to Paula Bennett’s plea to them to stump up some of their own cash so abused kids could be placed in iwi rather than state care.

(In her next paragraph she takes iwi leaders to task for being tardy or indolent.)

True to form, the tribal leaders haven’t bothered themselves sufficiently to make a collective response to Bennett. (Although her office says she is going to explain her proposals further at the invitation of some individual iwi.)

(Then it is a matter of establishing that the iwi owe the government money. Are Treaty Settlements ‘found money’ or are there strings attached?)
The young Cabinet minister went up in my estimation with her blunt message to the iwi leaders’ group to ‘put your hands in your own pockets’ to help find families who could take on children from their own iwi’ because the government doesn’t have the money for it now quite frankly’.

(Next the Key government is accused of being craven and the claim by Maori for the foreshore and seabed as corrupt.)

After months of the Key government’s craven behavior towards all things which Maori are corruptly claiming as theirs- like the prized and mineral- rich foreshore and seabed which we all own as Kiwis- it was refreshing to see a Cabinet minister give the tribal chiefs a rev-up.

(Then it is the Maori professor as space cadet. This calls into question the scholarship of Treaty claims and the general sociology and anthropology of race relations. The idea is that these academics live in a one dimensional world and this is usually hard anyway but in a small society like New Zealand it is very difficult).

Ngati Kahu Chairwoman Professor Margaret Mutu- one of the more disturbingly remote leaders- said Bennett’s suggestion that iwi provide funding and resources was ridiculous.
‘We can’t. We don’t have them. It’s a state responsibility. We know how bad it is. We know the helplessness and hopelessness of it, and that we are the only ones who can save ourselves. But we also need resources and the support of the state to do that.’
(The notion of ‘disturbingly remote’runs into the idea of psychological problems touching on pathology as Fran O’Sullivan accuses Mutu showing ‘learned helplessness’ and suggests that she is elitist. The underlying idea in the elitist suggestion is that Treaty Settlement money goes into education which promotes an the children of an elite but does nothing for people at risk).
This display of ‘learned helplessness’ from a university professor is deeply worrying. Or does Mutu cling to an outdated belief that only tribal elites- like herself- are capable of bettering themselves?

(Then O’Sullivan sets out the idea of a game.)

I very much doubt it. Mutu is one of eight tribal chairs who are very much focused on playing a double game to get ownership of a considerable lump of those assets that are either owned by the Crown on behalf of all New Zealanders- such as the foreshore and seabed-or are tucked up in state owned enterprises. Or have yet to roll off the Government’s drawing boards.

It is indeed true that child-abuse deaths for Maori were on a par with the rest of New Zealand in the mid 1980s. It is also true that Maori jobs vanished out of this economy as the 1980s Labour government demolished the railways, post office and forestry departments of that era.

(Fran O’Sullivan seems to not want to overstate things here. In fact there is something of a ‘negative sovereignty’ happening where Maori are in the majority in prisons and elsewhere in the justice system.)

But the Treaty of Waitangi settlements have also ensured a considerable shift of cash and assets into tribal hands since that time.

A couple of weeks ago I listened as the head of Ngai Tahu’s property company told a bunch of fascinated infrastructure investors how the South Island tribe had grown its portfolio from $2 million to $450 million since 1994.

Tony Sewell (a Pakeha) presented on Ngai Tahu’s behalf because its chairman Mark Solomon, pulled out at the last minute.

The basic gist was that Maori were- contrary to myth-making-relatively rich at the collective level. Maori equity could be as much as $25 billion although much of it was passive investments tied up in trusts.

Ngai Tahu was itself focused on building an inter-generational portfolio. Their perspective was a 50 to 200 year horizon.. But the aim was to have $1billion under management within a relatively short space of time.

Maori were a pivotal part of ‘New Zealand Inc’- major shareholders in dairy giant Fonterra, pastoral farming and the fishing industry and about to be in the preferred position when this government gets around to selling the deals on public-private partnerships.

‘Collective capitalism is the future, it is our past, it will deliver our potential and now is the hour’ was the mantra on the forum’s website when it hosted yet another gabfest on how Maori can become major infrastructure investors in New Zealand.

Don’t get me wrong here.

I am not against Maori having a slice of the pie. What I don’t like is the notion which is increasingly prevalent in government departments that Maori should be in some sort of preferred position because the assets- whether new infrastructure or a slice of an existing Government asset- will always remain in New Zealand ownership and be held for the longer term.

The message Maori are making to the smart money is this; pony up with us if you want a slice of the Government pie. At a superficial level- the same level which persuaded the Cabinet that our foreshore and seabed should be confiscated by statute and tucked into nebulous public domain-this is attractive.
It enables ministers to free up some cash for other purposes knowing that they have some inbuilt cheerleaders in the form of Maori who will clearly be in accord with any move that is in their commercial interest.

The play with long and short or immediate term is a significant part of this analysis.

It’s obvious that Maori are playing a very long term inter-generational game. But it is time Solomon, Mutu et al took their eyes off the asset grab and exerted some leadership in the interests of the current Maori generation.

SO THERE READERS- WHAT DO YOU THINK OF FRAN'S COMMENTS?


Health
There are currently eight major GM food crops on the market, so memorizing this list will help you avoid any and all food products that might contain GMO’s:

1.Soy
2.Corn
3.Cottonseed (used in vegetable cooking oils)
4.Canola (canola oil)
5.Sugar from sugar beets
6.Hawaiian papaya
7.Some varieties of zucchini
8.Crookneck squash

puff 511

Split Pin Engineering Rocks!
Safe and Sound Locksmiths Rule!

This is a daily spin on what is going on. For example the Hotaka says what is happening today on the radio and puts this in context for the month.
puff is sponsored by Campus Press and the Campus Press Update follows the Hotaka.
What else is happening? Get back to us via the Comments section of this Blog!

Saying of the week
Humans say that time passes
Time says that humans pass
Aotearoa Waka question of the day
The Great Southern Bubble: how much did Allan Hubbaed know about the state of his finance companies?
Issue of the week
What to do about Clayton Weatherspoon? Readers of puff are incensed about this person? Why? And where to from here? Should he have the right to appeal? Should he be allowed, one reader asks, to keep his academic qualifications? Please send in your comments.

'Maori have duty to fund their own,' says Fran O'Sullivan in the Saturday Herald- this story will be updated as the week goes by. Editors comments in brackets below.
Mute response to Minister’s call for iwi to support abused kids grates, given growing level of tribal wealth says Fran.

(O’Sullivan sets out the distinction between iwi and state in her opening paragraph,)

The Maori aristocracy has turned a deaf ear to Paula Bennet’s plea to them to stump up some of their own cash so abused kids could be placed in iwi rather than state care.

(In her next paragraph she takes iwi leaders to task for being tardy or indolent.)

True to form, the tribal leaders haven’t bothered themselves sufficiently to make a collective response to Bennett. (Although her office says she is going to explain her proposals further at the invitation of some individual iwi.)

(Then it is a matter of establishing that the iwi owe the government money).
The young Cabinet minister went up in my estimation with her blunt message to the iwi leaders’ group to ‘put your hands in your own pockets’ to help find families who could take on children from their own iwi’ because the government doesn’t have the money for it now quite frankly’.

(Next the Key government is accused of being craven and the claim by Maori for the foreshore and seabed as corrupt.)

After months of the Key government’s craven behavior towards all things which Maori are corruptly claiming as theirs- like the prized and mineral- rich foreshore and seabed which we all own as Kiwis- it was refreshing to see a Cabinet minister give the tribal chiefs a rev-up.

(Then it is the Maori professor as space cadet. This calls intp question the scholarship of Treaty claimm and general sociology and anthropology. These academics live in a one dimensional world and this is usually hard anyway but in a small society like New Zealand it is very difficult. And then there is the inversion; Paula Bennett is like Winston Peters is a Maori advocate for the state).

Ngati Kahu Chairwoman Professor Margaret Mutu- one of the more disturbingly remote leaders- said Bennett’s suggestion that iwi provide funding and resources was ridiculous.
‘We can’t. We don’t have them. It’s a state responsibility. We know how bad it is. We know the helplessness and hopelessness of it, and that we are the only ones who can save ourselves. But we also need resources and the support of the state to do that.’

This display of ‘learned helplessness’ from a university professor is deeply worrying. Or does Mutu cling to an outdated belief that only tribal elites- like herself- are capable of bettering themselves?

(Then O’Sullivan sets out the idea of a game.)

I very much doubt it. Mutu is one of eight tribal chairs who are very much focused on playing a double game to get ownership of a considerable lump of those assets that are either owned by the Crown on behalf of all New Zealanders- such as the foreshore and seabed-or are tucked up in state owned enterprises. Or have yet to roll off the Government’s drawing boards.

It is indeed true that child-abuse deaths for Maori were on a par with the rest of New Zealand in the mid 1980s. It is also true that Maori jobs vanished out of this economy as the 1980s Labour government demolished the railways, post office and forestry departments of that era.

But the Treaty of Waitangi settlements have also ensured a considerable shift of cash and assets into tribal hands since that time.

A couple of weeks ago I listened as the head of Ngai Tahu’s property company told a bunch of fascinated infrastructure investors how the South Island tribe had grown its portfolio from $2 million to $450 million since 1994.

Tony Sewell (a Pakeha) presented on Ngai Tahu’s behalf because its chairman Mark Solomon, pulled out at the last minute.

The basic gist was that Maori were- contrary to myth-making-relatively rich at the collective level. Maori equity could be as much as $25 billion although much of it was passive investments tied up in trusts.

Ngai Tahu was itself focused on building an inter-generational portfolio. Their perspective was a 50 to 200 year horizon.. But the aim was to have $1billion under management within a relatively short space of time.

Maori were a pivotal part of ‘New Zealand Inc’-major shareholders in dairy giant Fonterra,pastoral farming and the fishing industryand about to be in the preferred position when this government gets around to selling the deals on public-private partnerships.

‘Collective capitalism is the future, it is our past, it will deliver our potential and now is the hour’ was the mantra on the forum’s website when it hosted yet another gabfest on how Maori can become major infrastructure investors in New Zealand.

Don’t get me wrong here.

I am not against Maori having a slice of the pie. What I don’t like is the notion which is increasingly prevalent in government departments that Maori should be in some sort of prederred position because the assets- whether new infrastructure or a slice of an existing Government asset-m will always remain in New Zealand ownership and be held for the longer term.

The message Maori are making to the smart money is this; pony up with us if you want a slice of the Government pie. At a superficial level- the same level which persuaded the Cabinet that our foreshore and seabed should be confiscated by statute and tucked into nebulous public domain-this is attractive.
It enables ministers to free up some cash for other purposes knowing that they have some inbuilt cheerleaders in the form of Maori who will clearly be in accord with any move that is in their commercial interest.

The play with long and short or immediate term is a significant part of this analysis.

It’s obvious that Maori are playing a very long term inter-generational game. But it is time Solomon, Mutu et al took their eyes off the asset grab and exerted some leadership in the interests of the current Maori generation.

SO THERE READERS- WHAT DO YOU THINK OF FRAN'S COMMENTS?




Hotaka for Tuesday 31st Full Hotaka for August below

31st Tues
Te moana me te ngahere
Te whanga ki Te Awahou
Te kaupapa o te ra
Rangahau
Nga manu me nga ika o te whanga ki Te Awahou. He taonga mo te motu enei. He aha nga huarahi i mua kia kore e whakapaingia te awa I te paru.

Subject of the day
The Foxton Estuary

Analysis
The birds and the fish in the Foxton Estuary. These are national treasures. What are the pathways ahead if the pollution is not dealt with?
www.newzealand.com/.../nature_foxton_storyangle.cfm



Hotaka- monthly report August
2nd Monday
Rangitaanenuirawa
Subject of the day
Te kaupapa o te ra
Rangahau
I tera marama ka puta mai he ripoata mo te korero na Ta Meihana Durie mo Whanau Ora ki Te Manawa. He aha te mahi ma Rangitaane mo Whanau Ora? He aha nga mea e tika ana kia wanangahia ai e te iwi?
Subject of the day
Whanau ora and Rangitaane
Analysis
Last month there was a report on Sir Mason Durie’s talk at Te Manawa mo Whanau Ora. What should Rangitaane do about Whanau Ora? What are the things that should be examined by the iwi?

http://www.tpk.govt.nz/en/in-focus/whanau-ora/

3rd Tuesday
Te moana me te ngahere

Te kaupapa o te ra
He korero mo te whakaaetanga e mohiotia ana hei accord i waenganui i te iwi me te kaunihera, ROM me Horizons. E taea tena a te tuaiwa o Hereturikoka. He aha nga patai e puea ake nei?

Rangahau
Subject of the day
Analysis
A discussion about the accord between the iwi and the council, ROM and Horizons. This will happen on the 9th of August. What are the questions that come up?
www.horizons.govt.nz/.../10-114-Annex-A-Manawatu-River-Leaders-Forum-Leaders-Accord.pdf

4th Wed
Te kaupapa o te ra
Te mahere hakinakina o te Pouwhakaata Maori
Rangahau
He aha inaianei i muri i te mekemeke o Rawiri Tua me Monte Two Gunz Barrett ki Atlantic City? He aha te mahi ma te Pouwhakaata Maori mo David Tua? He aha nga hikoitanga tika ma Rawiri Tua inaianei?

Subject of the day
The sports strategy of Maori Television
Te ao paho
Analysis
What now after the David Tua- Monte Two Gunz Barrett fight in Atlantic City? What will Maori Television do regarding David Tua? What are the next steps for David Tua?
www.doghouseboxing.com/Chee/Chip072810.htm

5th Thursday
Te ao toi
Te kaupapa o te ra
He aha nga tino pikitia o tenei wa? Ko wai nga whetu nunui? He aha te kohumuhumu reka e puta mai i te ao pikitia?
Rangahau
Subject of the day
What are the best movies at the moment?
Analysis
What are the best movies at the moment? Who are the big stars? What is the juicy gossip coming from the world of movies?
www.cinecon.com/ -


6th Fri

Te whare miere
Kaupapa korero mo te ra nei
He ripoata na tetahi meme paremata pena i a Kelvin Davis

Rangahau
He whakararangi o nga mea i puta i te Whare Miere me nga korero e whai atu. Kei te aha nga mema paremata? He aha nga me e taea ana i te Whare Miere?

Subject of the day
A report by an MP like Kelvin Davis.
Analysis
A listing of events in the House and discussions of them. What are our parliamentarians doing? What is being accomplished in the Beehive?
www.beehive.govt.nz/ -

9th Monday Rangitaanenuirawa

Te kaupapa o te ra
Te kirimanu e kiia nei ko te Manawatu River Accord.

Rangahau
Ko tenei te wa whakaae. Ko wai i puta? He aha ai? Ka haere tatou katoa ki hea?

Subject of the day
The contract known as the Manawatu River Accord.
Analysis
This is the day of agreement. Who came to the big event and why. Where to from here for all concerned?
www.horizons.govt.nz/.../10-114-Annex-A-Manawatu-River-Leaders-Forum-Leaders-Accord.pdf

10th Tues
Te moana me te ngahere
Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga rakau o te Manawatu
Rangahau
He aha nga tino rakau o te rohe o te Manawatu? Kei hea enai rakau i tenei rohe. He aha nga mahi pai kia tiakina enei rakau?


Subject of the day
The trees of the Manawatu

Analysis
What are the main trees in the Manawatu area? Where are these trees in the district? What are the best things to do to protect these trees?

www.environmentnetwork.org.nz/9.html
11 Wed
Te ao paho
Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga teihana reo irirangi
Rangahau
E aha nga teihana reo irirangi i nga tau e rima e whai nei? E tika ana kia tu enei teihana i runga i o ratou na waewae? He aha nga huarahi e tika ana kia hikoingia ai e nga teihana reo Maori?
Subject of the day
Maori radio stations
Analysis
What will happen in Maori radio in the next five years? Should these stations stand on their own feet? What are the paths that the stations should take?

http://www.tmp.govt.nz/


12 Thursday
Te ao toi
Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga kaiwaiata Maori
Rangahau
He korero mo nga kaiwaiata Maori. Nga mea wahine. He hokinga whakaaro ki te ahurei i kiia ai ‘Seven Sisters’ i te wa o Matariki ki Te Papa Tongarewa. http://puffcom.blogspot.com/2010/08/matariki-2010.html

Subject of the day
Maori singers
Analysis
A discussion of Maori singers. Female singers. A look back at the concert called ‘Seven Sisters’ at Te Papa Tongarewa.
http://www.tepapa.govt.nz/WhatsOn/allevents/Pages/SevenSisters10june.aspx

13th Fri
Te whare miere
Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga nanakia i te Whare Miere
Rangahau
Ko wai nga tino nanakia i te Whare Miere? Ko Rodney Hyde? Ko wai ranei? He aha nga tohu o te nanakia i te Whare Miere?
Subject of the day
Scoundrels in Parliament

Analysis
Who is the worst scoundrel in Parliament? Rodney Hyde? Or who then? What are the distinguishing features of a true parliamentary scoundrel?
www.beehive.govt.nz/ -



16th Monday
Rangitaanenuirawa
Te kaupapa o te ra
Te Ahurei Kai Tuawhenua o Rangitaane

Rangahau
He korero mo te Ahurei Kai Tuawhenua o Rangitaane I whakatu ai ki Rangitaane Pa. He aha nga kai o tena wa? Te pai hoki o te mahi i mahia ai e Paora raua ko Lovey.

Subject of the day
The Rangitaane Wild Foods Festival

Analysis
A discussion about the Rangitaane Wild Food Festival held during Matariki at Rangitaane Pa. What are the foods of that occasion? What great work was done by Paul and Lovey!

new-zealand.tourism.net.nz/.../Wild-Food-Festival -

17th Tuesday
Te moana me te ngahere

Te kaupapa o te ra
Te mahi rapu hinu i nga moana
Rangahau
He aha nga whakaaro e puta nei mo te mahi rapu hinu i nga moana Maori. He aha nga ture e whaia nei e Jerry Brownlee ma? Na te aha e whiringia Te Tai Rawhiti me Te Tai Tokerau hei wahi pai mo te mahi whai hinu? Ko te nuinga o nga tangata i enei rohe, he Maori.
Subject of the day
Searching for oil in the seas

Analysis
What thoughts occur concerning the search for oil in Maori seas? What laws are being followed by Jerry Brownlee and others? Why is the East Coast and Northland being targeted? The majority of people in these areas are Maori.
www.oil-price.net/en/articles/the-oil-scene-in-new-zealand.php

18th Wed
Te ao paho

Te kaupapa o te ra
Te ao paho me te reo Maori
Rangahau
He aha te pai, te kino ranei o te pahotanga o nga mea Maori i te ao paho whanui? I te wiki o te reo Maori ka kitea, ka rongoa hokitia te reo i tena topito, tena o te motu. He aha nga piki me nga heke?

Subject of the day
The world of broadcasting and the Maori language

Analysis
What are the good and the bad points about the way Maori things are treated in the media? In Maori Language Week the language was seen and heard in many parts of the country. What were the highs and lows?
www.tpk.govt.nz/...broadcasting...media-maori-language.../tpk-broadcast-factsheet-en-2010.pdf

19thThurs
Te ao toi

Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga whakairo i roto i a Tuturu Pumau.
Rangahau
He aha nga kaupapa e whaia nei i nga whakairo i Tuturu Pumau? I te nuinga o nga wa ka whaia te mahi powhiri I roto o tenei whare. Te ataahua hoki o enei whakairo hei hoa tautoko i te kawa o te marae.

Subject of the day
The carvings in Tuturu Pumau.

Analysis
What themes are pursued in the carvings in Tuturu Pumau? On most occasions powhiri are conducted in this house. What beautiful aids these carving are in the process or the kawa of the marae.

www.maori.org.nz/whakairo/ -
20th Fri
Te whare miere
Te kaupapa o te ra
Ko wai nga tangata totika i te Whare Miere?
Rangahau
He korero mo nga tangata e piri ana ki te ara tika i te whare miere.Ka pohehe te tangata pea he papara kauta kaupoi te whare miere I etahi wa. Engari e kore e kore e kitea nga tangata to toa. Ko wai enei mea?

Subject of the day
Who are the straight shooters in Parliament?

Analysis
A discussion of the people who stick to the true path in Parliament. One might think that on occasion the parliament is like a cowboy saloon. But without a doubt the upstanding people will be seen. Who are these people?

www.beehive.govt.nz/ -

23rd Monday
Rangitaanenuirawa

Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga wa poti mo nga kaunihera
Rangahau
He aha nga huarahi e tika ana kia hikoingia e nga mea o Rangitaane mo nga wa poti e tu mai? E tu etahi o Rangitaane kaore ranei? He aha nga take e tika ana kia whaia ai.

Subject of the day
The council elections

Analysis
What are the paths to be traversed by Rangitaane regarding the forthcoming council elections? Will some of Rangitaane stand or not? What are the topics that should be pursued?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_government -

24th Tues
Te moana me te ngahere

Te kaupapa o te ra
Te Urewera
Rangahau
He aha nga aronga ki mua mo te ngahere o te Urewera? Kia hoki ai nga whakaaro, he rua marama pea mai raano ka karawhiua nga kaupapa o Tuhoe i te teepu paremata. Kua warewaretia ena kaupapa? He aha nga huarahi e tika ana kia whiringia e Tuhoe mo te ngahere o te Urewera inaianei?

Subject of the day
The Urewera

Analysis
What are the ways forward regarding the Urewera National Park? If we go back two months the issues of Tuhoe were swept from the cabinet table. Have those issues been forgotten? What paths might best be chosen by Tuhoe about the Urewera National Park now?
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/3679521/Maori-Party-furious-over-Govts-Tuhoe-decision

25th Wed
Te ao paho

Te kaupapa o te ra
Ko wai te tino kaiwhakapaho?
Rangahau
He aha nga mea tino pai rawa atu kia whaia e nga kaiwhakapaho? E tika ana ma te kaiwhakapaho e whai i ona ano whakaaro, i nga whakaaro o nga mea e whakarongo ana ranei?

Subject of the day
Who is the best broadcaster?

Analysis
What are the most important things for broadcasters to follow? Should broadcasters follow their own instincts or should they follow the thoughts of the listeners?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_broadcasting –

26th Thurs
Te ao toi

Te kaupapa o te ra
Te mahi tunu kai
Rangahau
He aha nga tino mea i te mahi tunu kai? Kia whakatungia ai tetahi whakataetae mo nga kaitunu Maori e aha nga mea e tika ana kia kitea ai?

Subject of the day
Cookiing

Analysis
What are the most important things about cooking? If a Maori Chef contest was to be held what are the things that might be seen?

www.contestcook.com/ -
27th Fri
Te whare miere

Te kaupapa o te ra
Te hurirauna i te whare
Rangahau
Nga whakaaro o Kelvin Davis mo nga mea i puta i te whare i te wiki i mahue ake nei. He hikoitanga i te hinengaro o tetahi mema paremata.

Subject of the day
The round of the house

Analysis
The thoughts of Kelvin Davis about what happened in the house during the week. A journey through the mind of one parliamentarian.

www.beehive.govt.nz/ -

30th Monday
Rangitaanenuirawa

Te kaupapa o te ra
Nga rohe o Rangitaane.
Rangahau
He tirohanga whanui ki nga rohe katoa o Rangitaane. Te rahi hoki o nga rohe e meatia nei. He titiro ki nga awa I ro tonu o tena rohe rangitaane tena.


Subject of the day
The districts of Rangitaane

Analysis
A broad look at the districts of Rangitaane. How big a scale is involved in these districts. A look at the rivers in each Rangitaane district.
www.teara.govt.nz/en/rangitane

31st Tues
Te moana me te ngahere
Te whanga ki Te Awahou
Te kaupapa o te ra
Rangahau
Nga manu me nga ika o te whanga ki Te Awahou. He taonga mo te motu enei. He aha nga huarahi i mua kia kore e whakapaingia te awa I te paru.

Subject of the day
The Foxton Estuary

Analysis
The birds and the fish in the Foxton Estuary. These are national treasures. What are the pathways ahead if the pollution is not dealt with?
www.newzealand.com/.../nature_foxton_storyangle.cfm


Papers on Social Work 4th Edition by Peter Cleave has been released by Campus Press, There is a discussion of Whanau Ora the New Zealand government's strategy for social work announced in April-May 2010. There is a revisiting of the theme of restorative justice. All this and the classic, prize winning essays on social work education and value systems that have made Papers on Social Work one of the best selling books in the Campus Press set, internationally and locally.


Papers on Social Work, Fourth Edition has the ISBN
978-1-877229-47-3

NZD 60.00 including tax plus 7.50 Post and Pack no matter how big the order.

Payment COD into nominated account.

Delivery within a month.

Order through comment or email to puffmedia@yahoo.co.nz using the Order Form at the bottom of this email.

About the author.
It is said that Peter Cleave has more books in New Zealand Libraries than any other author. Beginning as a collaborator on The Oxford Picture Dictionary of Maori in 1979 there has been a consistent pattern of a book published, an article in a referred journal and then a radio commentary repeated over a long period. With this pattern of published work have come the prizes; the First Class Masterate from Auckland University and a Commonwealth scholarship to the University of Oxford, the Phillip Bagby Scholarship and Rhodes Foundation funds while doing the Oxford Doctorate, the chair of the college common room and on from these to taking the prizes for best paper at conferences like the International Federation of Social Workers in Montreal in 2000.

Peter Cleave is without peer at the meeting place of language, culture and criticism, locally and internationally and this is seen in the sale of his books to libraries in New Zealand and Australia and around the world.

At the same time Peter Cleave, a former captain of the Manurewa High School First Fifteen in South Auckland, works on community radio and touches base with working people. He left school to work on the MV Tofua, a Banana Boat and began to learn about the Pacific, something he is still doing.

About Campus Press
Campus Press is the biggest academic press outside the universities in New Zealand. It was established in 1992 and for the last twelve years has been based in Palmerston North. Campus Press mostly supplies libraries.

Papers on Social Work, 4th Edition follows other releases in 2010 like Takutai: the Foreshore and Seabed, New Zealand’s most topical book with implications for US, European and other coastlines. ISBN 978-1-877229-46-6 See the attachment for the cover.



Takutai, the foreshore and seabed by Peter Cleave gives an historical background and then an analysis of the 2004 Foreshore and Seabed Act and the 2009 Ministerial Review. There is a wide range of examples of co-governance and co-management by iwi and councils of the foreshore and seabed from around Aotearoa/New Zealand. International case studies are also given. The Conclusion sets the scene for the Repeal of the Act and the introduction of new legislation in 2010.

What the critics had to say about the advance article;

one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. …an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Professor Paul Moon

Takutai costs 57.00NZD from Campus Press with a 7.50 NZD freight charge no matter how big the order.

Order by return email using the Order Form at the bottom of this email if you like.

 

Full Review of Peter Cleave’s Ten Volume Set

By Paul Moon

July 2009

The very nature of academic publishing is that it serves a niche market, and in a country as small as New Zealand, that niche can be so narrow that some books probably never see the light of day because they are simply uneconomic to produce. So when a ten-volume set of books is released, written by Professor Peter Cleave – one of New Zealand’s respected academics – attention is bound to be aroused by the scale of the venture, and by the promise of a substantial body of content.

The work’s opening volume comprises a collection of articles, some of which are new, and some of which are revised versions of existing articles that Cleave has written or presented. The relevancy of the work is underscored by the first paper, which contains suggested options for dealing with the vexed issue of the Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004. The Government has indicated that it will reach some conclusions on this matter within the next two months, but regardless of what is decided, it will be interesting to see the extent to which Cleave’s recommendations are reflected in Government policy, and for academics to debate some of the themes raised long after any settlement has been made at a political level. This article stands out as being the most detailed in this volume, and certainly one of the most well-conceived discussions of the present state of the Act that exists in print anywhere. For this piece alone, the first volume in this collection makes an extremely useful contribution not only to academic discourse, but to issues affecting the national life of the country.

Other articles in this volume focus on issues surrounding Maori language – its survival, its transition from an oral to a written language, and its re-emergence as an oral and written language. To this is added a highly original and possibly even provocative piece on conceptual interpretations of pa; a reflection on issues associated with the 1981 Springbok rugby tour to New Zealand, and concludes with a series of brief but brilliant articles which tackle a variety of culturally-charged concepts, and which, among much else, challenge the reader’s understanding of meanings associated with them.

From a collection of articles, Cleave then provides in the second volume of this collection a book. Starting points? A discussion of contemporary Maori society and culture, is primarily about New Zealand historiography, into which is injected a broad range of arguments and perspectives relating to issues such as culture, identity, tradition and modernity, and the media. One of the great strengths of this volume is the extent to which Cleave is able to draw on international material and examples to illuminate his arguments, without the reader ever getting the sense that he is being overwhelmed by comparative examples from other countries. It is a difficult balance to establish, but when handled as masterfully as in Starting Points? The benefits are immediately apparent. The theme of literacy raised in the first volume reappears briefly in this one, but in a substantially different context, with a strong connection with the way in which history works in cultures that had/have strong oral components. In the central sections of this volume is a series of analyses of the works of other writers, in which Cleave adopts the format of quoting passages from articles, and then providing a commentary on them. This is an approach to criticism that is too seldom utilised. In the case of this volume, it has enabled Cleave to deconstruct and then reconstruct ideas and themes, using these sources as interchangeable building blocks – able to be assembled in a variety of forms according to the writer’s perspectives.

Following on from Starting Points? is the third edition of one of Cleave’s seminal works: Rangahau pae iti kahurangi: Research in a small world of light and shade. This work, on themes and approaches to research in a broadly Maori context, has become a recommended text book for many tertiary course around the country, and draws heavily on traditional concepts of learning and understanding as part of the basis for one of the frameworks of research. The traditional is not closed off from critique, however, and Cleave’s great strength in this area is his ability to combine an in-depth cultural knowledge with recent scholarship on research, producing insightful and useful conclusions for anyone engaged in this area of study.

Another third edition in this collection is Papers on Social Work. His volume is made up of seven papers dealing with subjects from the more standard ones, such as ethics, to the some unlikely choices, such as the city space and social work, and the thematically-related article on places of inquiry. Yet, whether predictable or otherwise, Cleave brings new insights and challenging perspectives to the reader. Even the most experienced social work practitioner would be bound to have the perceptions of their profession augmented as a result of reading this book and absorbing some of its ideas.

Papers on Social Work is followed by the 244-page volume Papers on Language. Made up of thirteen articles, this work has Cleave again drawing on a useful quantity of international scholarship, and revealing why he is so highly-regarded in the academic community. There are too few writers in this country capable of combining material from so many different disciplines and in a way that produces such a wide variety of perspectives. Again, there is some material here that appears elsewhere, but its precise employment this volume avoids any sense of repetition. A few of the shorter articles in this volume would be suited mainly for teachers of te reo, but otherwise, the tenor of the works as a whole is well-suited to the general academic reader.

The next book in this collection is the 197-page What do we know about the mark on the wall? Images, rules and prior knowledge. As for its subject, Cleave opens with the teasing line: ‘As the author I still have difficulty saying what his book is about’. But rather than answer with a pithy summary, Cleave allows the ideas contained in this work to speak for themselves – no more, no less. Themes about the meaning of ideas, place, and memory compete with topics on historiography, sociolinguistics, and social geography, among many others. This is probably the most challenging book in the collection. Cleave moves, sometimes with great speed, from one topic to another, often leaving just hints of whole new areas of potential exploration. The reader might feel settled with an idea, and then in the next paragraph, Cleave might challenge that idea from several angles, before hauling the topic elsewhere, with a series of careful thematic links. There is no stated topic for this book, and nor ought there to be. It is like a rhapsody, with different motifs surfacing at various points, connected by very little at times, yet, at the conclusion, it all seems to have a link of sorts to the idea of knowledge. This is possibly one of the most satisfying yet challenging works in the collection.

Te Pu Tapere- the impulse to perform, formerly known as Depot Takirua, is the third edition of this work, and focuses mainly on the electronic media. At 204 pages, it is as substantial a work as any of its companion volumes in this collection, and for those studying film and television in New Zealand, it would be indispensible. This most certainly ought to be a prescribed text for all media students. The portrayal of Maori in film and television comes in for close scrutiny here, and Cleave seizes on several deficiencies and stereotypes in the way culture is presented in popular culture. The chapter on Jane Campion’s The Piano is one of the outstanding portions of this book, and as all the other chapters, offers insights that hitherto have not been available to readers interested in these areas of study. Some of the essays in this work date back to the 1990s, but have been revised where appropriate to maintain their currency.

Iwi Station: A Discussion of Print, Radio, Television, and the Internet in Aotearoa/ New Zealand also has a string media focus, as the title suggests. However, in keeping with the general approach of the other volumes in this collection, Cleave has added elements of history, sociology, and anthropology into the mix. And instead of merely being descriptive about the topics he has chosen, Cleave continually probes and questions to elicit deeper meanings behind them. This is most certainly a text that should be compulsory reading for every journalist and person involved in the media in New Zealand. In particular, it lifts the lid on the sorts of conceptual developments in thought that have led to the status the media currently has in New Zealand.

This collection, coming out as a single set, is unique in New Zealand academic writing. But the format and quantity side, the lasting value of these works is in the ideas they express and the changes in perception that they will bring about for the reader. Cleave deserves full praise for the contribution he has made in these works to the intellectual conversation about New Zealandness.

Paul Moon is Professor of History at Te Ara Poutama, the faculty of Maori Development at AUT University.

There are ten books in the basic Campus Press set. All of these are 200 pages or more in length. Terms of Trade are that the books are available from Campus Press for 57.00 NZD as individual titles or for 400.00 NZD for the Collection.

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Terms of trade are $57.00 to Campus Press. There is a $7.50 Post and Package cost no matter how big the order is.

Titles and ISBN numbers are below;

978-1-877229-35-0 Aotearoa, papers of contest, Third Edition

978-1-877229-32-9 Maori Unpacked Second Edition

978-1-877229-37-4 Iwi Station Second Edition

978-1-877229-39-8 Papers on Language Third Edition

978-1-877229-42-8 Papers on Social Work Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Rangahau pae iti kahurangi Third Edition

978-1-877229-44-2 What do we know about the mark on the wall Third Edition

978-1-877229-43-5 Te Pu Tapere- the Impulse to perform, formerly titled, From the Depot Takirua, Third Edition

978-1-877229-41-1 Papers to conference Fourth Edition

978-1-877229-38-1 Starting Points


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