New Zealand

Buchanan, Rachel. “Re-making Memory on Matiu and Other ‘Settlement’ Sites.” Memory Connection Journal 1, no. 1 (2011). Accessed January 3, 2012. http://www.memoryconnection.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/RachelBuchanan1.pdf.

—. The Parihaka Album: Lest We Forget. Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand: Huia Publishers, 2009.

—. “Illuminations.” Griffith Review 28 (2010), available online at: www.griffithreview.com

—. “Decolonizing the Archives: The work of New Zealand’s Waitangi Tribunal.” Public History Review. (August 2007).

—. ‘The Dementia Wing of History.’ Cultural Studies Review 13, no.1 (2007): 173-186.

Byrne, G. “The paradox of ‘settlement’: History and the modern Treaty claims process’, commissioned article for the ‘Post-Treaty Settlements Policy Project.” Institute of Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, online publication, http://posttreatysettlements.org.nz/the-paradox-of-settlement/.

— ‘By Which Standards? History and the Waitangi Tribunal: A Reply’, New Zealand Journal of History 40, no. 2 (2006): 214-29.

— ”Relic of 1840” or Founding Document? The Treaty, the Tribunal and concepts of time’,Kotuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online 1 (2006):1–12, http://www.rsnz.org/publish/kotuitui/2006/01.php.

— ‘Nation and Identity in the Waitangi Tribunal Reports’, in James H. Liu, Tim McCreanor, Tracey MacIntosh and Teresia Teaiwa, eds, New Zealand Identities: Departures and Destinations, Victoria University Press, Wellington, (2005), 88-103.

— The Waitangi Tribunal and New Zealand History, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, (2004), vii + 222.

— ‘Jackals of the Crown? Historians and the Treaty Claims Process’, in Bronwyn Dalley and Jock Phillips, eds, Going Public: The Changing Face of New Zealand History, Auckland University Press, (2001), 110-122.

— ‘Past the Last Post? Time, Causation and Treaty Claims History’, in Law, Text, Culture, Special Issue ‘Making Law Visible, Past and Present Histories and Postcolonial Theory’, vol. 7, (2003), 251-276.

— ‘The New Zealand Experience: Outcomes, Research and Institutional Arrangements’, in Balayi: Culture, Law and Colonialism, vol. 5, (2002), 25-41.

— ‘Claims on the Past: Maori, Pakeha and the Politics of Settlement,” in Prospects and Retrospects: Law in History – Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference of the Australia and New Zealand Law and History Society 2001, edited by Wayne Rumbles and Paul Havemann. University of Waikato, Hamilton, (2002): 155-63.

Byrne, G. and David Ritter, “Antipodean Settler Societies and their Complexities: the Waitangi Process in New Zealand and Native Title and the Stolen Generations in Australia.” Journal of Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 46, 1 (February 2008): 54–78.

Coombes, Annie E. Rethinking settler colonialism: History and memory in Australia, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand and South Africa. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2011.

Lawn, Jenny. “Settler Society and Postcolonial Apologies in Australia and New Zealand.” Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology & Cultural Studies 5, 1 (June 2008): 20-40.

—. “From the Spectral to the Ghostly: Postcolonial Gothic and New Zealand Literature.” Australasian-Canadian Studies 24, 2 (2006): 143-169.

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