New Zealand's broadcasting model as a colonial construct: A personal reflection

  • Haunui Royal

Abstract

In this paper, Haunui Royal reflects on his professional career as a filmmaker in 1980s and 1990s Aotearoa New Zealand committed to directing and producing kaupapa Māori documentaries for public television.

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References

Royal, H. (2019, June 19). Te Whaioranga: The Road to Recovery. Public Seminar, Auckland Libraries, Central Library, 44 Lorne Street, Auckland CBD, 12noon to 1pm.

Rowan Light (2020) “Nō Tātou Te Toto” / “The Blood We Share”: Māori Television and the Reconfiguring of New Zealand War Memory, Journal of Australian Studies, 44(4), 457-472.

Warbrick, P. (2021). Price of citizenship for Maori: A matter of historical and legal context. Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Law and History Society, 8(2), 58-86.

Smith, G. H. (2003). Indigenous struggle for the transformation of education and schooling. Transforming Institutions: Reclaiming Education and Schooling for Indigenous Peoples, Keynote Address to the Alaskan Federation of Natives (AFN) Convention. Anchorage, Alaska, U.S October 2003 (October), 1-14.

Published
2022-10-03
How to Cite
Royal, H. (2022). New Zealand’s broadcasting model as a colonial construct: A personal reflection. Te Kaharoa, 15(1), 14. https://doi.org/10.24135/tekaharoa.v15i1.402