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A university has awarded a posthumous degree to its first indigenous student more than 100 years after she began her studies.
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ICT News on MSNGLOBAL INDIGENOUS: Waorani people fight for their rights in EcuadorThe Waorani people demand the right to decide their future in Ecuador, Indigenous communities in Taiwan battle a new digital ...
Te Pāti Māori spokesperson for Broadcasting, Tākuta Ferris, and MP for Tāmaki Makaurau, Takutai Tarsh Kemp, are demanding the ...
Mākereti Papakura died in 1930, just weeks before she was due to present her thesis, almost 100 years later she will be ...
From engineering to iwi advocacy, Puhirake Ihaka returned to Tauranga Moana to serve his people and spent the next three ...
Marlon Williams has sung in te reo Māori his whole life, but never felt confident enough to write a full album in the ...
People Against Prisons Aotearoa spokesperson and University of Auckland criminologist Dr. Emmy Rākete says the ban is ...
New Zealand's coalition government is set to reinstate a total ban on prisoner voting, reversing a 2020 law that allowed some ...
Whanganui is ready to launch its first citizens’ assembly to shape the future of outdoor swimming in the district, including ...
An Oxford University degree will be awarded to a Maori princess more than 100 years after she began her studies.
Ngāpuhi stands at a crossroads as the push for unity, settlement and a stronger future reaches a critical moment.
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Fossils Beneath the Fiords: How New Zealand’s Landscape Hid Its Prehistoric PastImagine hiking through New Zealand’s wild Fiordland, mist curling around ancient peaks, waterfalls thundering into ...
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