Click on a document title to see detailed statistics for that document.
The number in (parentheses) is the number of distinct countries from which the document has been downloaded (i.e., excluding abstract views). |
| Document |
Downloads |
|---|
| Te Ao o te Whaikōrero | 210 | (8) |
| He tanga ngutu, he Tuhoetanga te mana motuhake o te ta moko wahine: The identity politics of moko kauae | 196 | (11) |
| Ko te waihanga me nga wehewehenga o te whaikorero: The structural system of whaikorero and its components | 146 | (7) |
| He Take Hei Pupuri Tonu i te Whenua: A Perspective on Hapū Formation in Māori Society | 108 | (8) |
| Kete | 105 | (12) |
| Tōku Haerenga | 94 | (8) |
| Te mana o te reo me ngā tikanga: Power and politics of the language | 91 | (6) |
| `E pakihi hakinga a kai: An examination of pre-contact resource management practice in Southern Te Wai Pounamu | 62 | (9) |
| Taniko / Piupiu | 62 | (11) |
| The physicality of Māori message transmission - Ko te tinana, he waka tuku kōrero | 58 | (11) |
| Māori Perspectives on the Foreshore and Seabed Debate: A Dunedin Case Study | 56 | (9) |
| Exhibit A: Whakapapa and list of heirs for Te Rangitukehu | 52 | (6) |
| Ngā reo o ngā niupepa: Māori language newspapers 1855-1863 | 52 | (8) |
| The Dissipation of Indigeneity Through Religion | 52 | (8) |
| Poia atu taku poi: Unearthing the knowledge of the past | 47 | (7) |
| Tā te Pūnaha Mātauranga o Aotearoa he Kaikai Haere i te Oranga Tonutanga o te Reo: The Perpetuation of Māori Language Loss in the New Zealand Education System – A Pākehā Perspective | 44 | (7) |
| Mā te huruhuru te manu ka rere – The Formation of Māori Identity in Dunedin High Schools | 43 | (8) |
| Exhibit A: Whakapapa and list of heirs for Te Rangiheua | 41 | (6) |
| Mai i te Ao Kohatu: Weaving – An Artform Derived from Mätauranga Mäori as a Gift from the Ancestors | 41 | (4) |
| Tō ‘Tātou’ Reo Rangatira: National Treasure or Taonga Māori – An investigation into the motivations of Pākehā in learning the Māori language | 41 | (5) |
| Kā Uri ā Papatūānuku: An investigation of pre-contact resource management in Te Wāi Pounamu | 39 | (8) |
| Taonga tukuiho (korowai) | 36 | (12) |
| Mai i Aotearoa – From New Zealand: The effects of living in Australia on Māori identity | 35 | (9) |
| Pacific Island women, body image and sport | 34 | (6) |
| Exhibit A: Whakapapa and heirs to Marewa Te Kahupake or Te Ruatareti (died June 10. 1886) | 33 | (5) |
| Ko taku rau kotahi | 33 | (5) |
| Mai i ngā Ao e Rua – From Two Worlds : An investigation into the attitudes towards half castes in New Zealand | 33 | (10) |
| Kia tū ko taikākā: Let the heartwood of Māori identity stand - An investigation into the appropriateness of the legal definition of ‘Māori’ for Māori | 30 | (8) |
| Stranger to the Islands: voice, place and the self in Indigenous Studies | 30 | (7) |
| Indigenising the Academy: Indigenous scholars as agents of change | 26 | (4) |
| Maori, European and Half-caste Children; The Destitute, the Neglected and the Orphaned An Investigation into the Early New Zealand European Contact Period and the Care of Children 1840 - 1852 | 26 | (9) |
| Kete kiekie | 25 | (6) |
| Māori "Conversion" to the Rule of Law and Nineteenth-Century Imperial Loyalties | 24 | (6) |
| Exhibit A: Whakapapa and list of heirs for Oke Pukeroa | 23 | (6) |
| Teaching and Learning an Indigenous Language Through its Narratives: Mäori in Aotearoa/New Zealand | 21 | (4) |
| Poia atu / mai (?) taku poi – The Polynesian Origins of Poi | 21 | (5) |
| Understanding Whangara: Whale Rider as Simulacrum | 21 | (5) |
| Poia mai taku poi: Unearthing the knowledge of the past | 20 | (4) |
| What is Māori Studies? | 20 | (5) |
| Race tactics: The racialised athletic body | 19 | (4) |
| Polynesian rugby player's perceptions and experiences of professional rugby | 18 | (6) |
| Resource management and Māori attitudes to water in southern New Zealand | 17 | (6) |
| Indigenous Legal Traditions: Looking at ways to reconcile aboriginal law and common law. A practical and principled approach. | 17 | (5) |
| Tackling Māori Masculinity: A Colonial Genealogy of Savagery and Sport | 17 | (5) |
| The Death of Koro Paka: “Traditional" Māori Patriarchy | 17 | (7) |
| What is the Impact and Implications of Ministry of Education Legislative Changes to Teacher Qualifications (effective 1 January 2006) on and for Teaching Staff in Kura Kaupapa Māori? | 17 | (6) |
| Te mana o te tangata whenua: Indigenous assertions of sovereignty | 16 | (6) |
| The Māori All Blacks and the Decentering of the White Subject: Hyperrace, Sport and the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism | 16 | (6) |
| Ngä Reo o ngä Niupepa: Ngä niupepa reo Mäori 1855-1863 | 14 | (3) |
| He Kura Mäori, he Kura Hähi | 14 | (4) |
| Voice and the Postmodern Condition | 13 | (5) |
| Print Culture and the Collective Māori Consciousness | 13 | (5) |
| Of the people, for the people, by the people: He tangata, He tangata, He tangata - The value of autobiography in academia: Maori women and Post World War Two American Presidents | 11 | (4) |
| Puna Kei‘ā: Te au tangata ē te ‘enua – The district of Kei‘ā: The people and the land | 11 | (4) |
| Reflections: Te Kura Unua 2006 | 10 | (3) |
| Book Launch Speech: Ngā Mōteatea: He Kupu Arataki: An Introduction, by Jane McRae | 9 | (4) |
| Beginning a conversation: writing a history about Mangaia | 7 | (3) |
| Whiteness: Naivety, Void and Control | 7 | (3) |
| Kaupapa Māori [visual communication] design Investigating ‘visual communication design by Māori, for Māori’, through practice, process and theory | 7 | (4) |
| He waiū whenua, he whakamāhuri tōtora - From an Indigenous base, the sapling [learner] matures | 6 | (2) |
| Te hā whakawairua, whakatinina i Te Tiriti o Waitangi me ngā āhuatanga Māori i te whakaakoranga: Self determination through the control of Māori education – knowledge, teaching and learning, philosophy and research. | 5 | (3) |
| The Logic of Terror | 5 | (3) |
| Waiata-a-ringa (Action song) - Te Tumu | 4 | (2) |
| Ngā Tari Māori ki te Ao: Māori Studies in the World | 4 | (1) |
| Ngā Pūrongo o ia Tari Māori: Reflections on research, teaching, and other developments in Te Tumu | 4 | (2) |
| Waiata-a-ringa (Action song) - Taku Manatawa | 3 | (2) |
| Waiata-a-ringa (Action song) - Te Rangihiroa | 2 | (1) |
| Reweti Kohere's Model Village | 2 | (1) |
| PACI 102: Pacific Dance - An Introduction | 1 | (1) |
| Indigenous Language Print Culture: Colonial Discourses and Indigenous Agency | 1 | (1) |
The orginal code for generating these statistics was written at the University of Melbourne, then modified and substantially rewritten by Christian McGee and Arthur Sale at the University of Tasmania (contact eprints@leven.comp.utas.edu.au).