Podcasts


Join in on New Zealand’s first on-line live policy debate on Tuesday 31 March at 7.30pm NZ time.

You can register on the new site – ‘Think Tech’  http://www.thinktech.co.nz   You’ll be able to listen to the debate on-line and send in comments and questions for the panel in real time.

Eight New Zealanders will debate live on-line, the effects of technology on education and society twenty years from today.  The panelists are:

  • Seddon Bennington (CEO Te Papa)
  • Maria English (Student and award winning debater)
  • Oscar Kightley (Entertainer, writer and commentator)
  • Bernice Mene (Secondary Futures ‘Guardian’ and former Silver Ferns
    captain)
  • Luke Nola (Producer of TVNZ ‘Let’s Get Inventing’)
  • Richie Poulton (Director, Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Research Unit at Otago University at Otago University)
  • Antony Royal (IT entrepreneur and business leader)
  • Kevin Norquay (Senior journalist with NZPA)

Hope you can make it!

Treaty debates 2009 Māori in Parliament and the future of the Māori seats

Claudia Geiringer, co-chair, comment on the two speakers:

There is a great deal of food for thought in the two speeches, and it is clear from them that the future of the Māori seats remains a hotly contested question. There would seem to be at least three related levels on which we could frame the debate that is going on here:

First, we could frame it in functional terms: as a debate over whether the Māori seats facilitate or hinder fair and effective representation for Māori on the one hand, and for non-Māori on the other.

But secondly, sitting behind that functional question are broader and contested questions about the nature of our constitution – the principles that it protects, how we define those principles and what happens when they come into conflict with each other. For example, both the speakers invoked their own conceptions of “democracy” and “equality”. Perhaps we can all agree that these are principles that our constitution values, but what do they actually mean? And are they advanced or undermined by separate representation? And how do they sit in relation to other principles that we might also value such as biculturalism, minority protection and, of course, the principles of Te Tiriti itself.

Finally, at a third level, there is a conversation going on here about the symbolic significance of the Māori seats – what symbolic message do they convey to Maori and to non-Māori? And what significance, if any, should we place on the symbolic value of the seats, as compared with the more functional questions concerning their ability to secure a fair and effective representation system?

Question to Derek Fox from online audience

Question: How do you define a sovereign state, and do you think New Zealand was such a sovereign state by 1840, and why?

Answer from Derek Fox (11/02/09): In terms of the question – actually after the actual debate the other night it struck me that the whole thing was probably a classic case of two different world views. Even the question about sovereign state depends very much on what your starting point is. The conventional wisdom is that a sovereign state is one with secure borders respected by your neighbors containing peoples who want to be part of the state and have a shared vision and purpose and are working towards that.

In 1840 the Rangatira and iwi their constituent hapu and whānau had tino rangatiratanga over their rohe and assets. My view is there was a steady state of security worked out over several hundred years – I’d call that rangatiratanga. It might also amount to sovereignty.

Video recording of the second Treaty Debate

We apologise for the poor quality of this recording. We had some technical issues but have recovered the debate as best as we could.

View the Video recordings

Derek Fo

What do you think of the Māori seats in Parliament?

On Thursday 5 February @ 6.30 – 8 p.m. two speakers will deal with this provocative issue – The role of Māori in Parliament and the future of the Māori seats.

Professor Philip Joseph and Derek Fox will discuss this topic as part of Te Papa’s annual Treaty Debate series.

Join the debate

We want to hear what you think. You can watch via our webcast, and use the chat window to give us your opinions, or to ask questions. Te Papa staff will put your questions to the debaters.

Or you could send in a question to janek@tepapa.govt.nz. We will ask as many of your questions as there is time for.

Join us on Thursday at http://www.tepapa.govt.nz/treatydebates.

History of the Māori seats

Created in 1867 as a temporary measure, the four Maori seats continued for over a hundred years to provide some voice for Maori in Parliament.

It was often a muffled voice and one easily ignored in a democratic structure dominated by non-Māori members. But with the first elections under MMP in 1996, Māori interest in the political world expanded, numbers on the Māori electoral roll increased, and Māori were entitled to more seats.

The Foreshore and Seabed Act 2004 was followed by the establishment of the Māori Party and greater political party interest to work with Māori .

All has conspired to make the Māori seats a hot topic for debate!

Dr Claudia Orange

Director History and Pacific Cultures

Rawiri Paratene is well known to New Zealand audiences – as an actor, student activist, and more recently as one of the stars of the movie Whale Rider.

You can see Rawiri playing Koro in the film Whale Rider in this video clip on Te Ara:

http://www.teara.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/SeaLife/TeWhanauPuhaWhales/3/ENZ-Resources/Standard/4/en

Following the success of Whale Rider, Rawiri has found himself more and more involved with whales. He and Witi Ihimaera, the author of the book Whale Rider on which the film was based, are now both trustees of the South Pacific Whales Research Consortium.

Rawiri recently had the chance to see for himself the work of whale researchers, such as Nan Hauser and her team in Rarotonga, Cook Islands. He also took time to attend presentations from researchers at the SPWRC meeting held at Auckland University earlier this year. That’s where we caught up with him.

Listen to Rawiri talk about being a trustee for SPWRC, and his first encounter with a whale “eye to eye”.

http://www.tepapa.govt.nz/podcasts/whales/Rawiri-Paratene05Feb.mp3

Viliamo Iese lives on Tuvalu, and recently attended the South Pacific Whales Research Group Consortium meeting at Auckland University in February 2008.

Where exactly is Tuvalu? It’s a 2 hour flight north of Fiji. Tuvalu is made up of 6 atolls and 3 islands – and some are only 5 metres above sea level – but it has a very small land mass of only about 26 square kilometres – spread over a vast area of the Pacific.

This makes researching whales and dolphins in Tuvalu particularly challenging! But with help from New Zealand, the support of the Tuvalu government and the efforts of Vili, the Pacific Island nation of Tuvalu is all set to contribute to our understanding of whales in the South Pacific.

Listen to Viliamo Iese talking about whale research and cultural attitudes to whales in Tuvalu. (duration about 9 minutes)

Download Viliamo Iese’s interview (mp3, 8.66 MB)

Vili Iese and other whale researchers, SPWRC meeting Auckland Feb 08

Vili Iese (right) talks to other whale researchers at the SPWRC meeting, Auckland, Feb 2008

Every year, a lively and enthusiastic group of scientists meets at the University of Auckland School of Biological Sciences to compare notes about whales.

The South Pacific Whales Research Consortium (SPWRC) first met in 1999 as a group of friends who wanted to share their whale research. The group has grown since then and now plays a vital role in coordinating and reporting on non-lethal whale research in the South Pacific.

Their work will help strengthen the New Zealand Government’s case to ban whaling in the Southern Ocean at the International Whaling Commission annual meeting in Chile in June 2008. Michael Poole is a founding member of SPWRC and has spent more than 20 years researching whales and dolphins in French Polynesia.

Listen to Michael Poole talking about his fascinating whale research on the island of Mo’orea,Tahiti (duration about 6 minutes).

Michael Poole interview.mp3 (6.19 mB)

Michael Poole and Anton van Helden

Michael Poole and Anton van Helden at the SPWRC meeting in Auckland, 6 February 2008.