A new
resource aims to delve behind the headlines to provide much-needed historical
context to topical stories of the day. The Meeting Place — A New Zealand History
Blog was created by historian Vincent O’Malley (left).
Dr O’Malley
says that he set up the blog in part out of frustration at the frequent failure
of media organisations to fully understand and report the historical background
to the stories they carried.
“Take the
water claim, for example. It was as if that had emerged out of nowhere,
encouraging headlines about opportunistic Maori claims. In fact, as I discuss
in one of the early blog posts, Maori made it clear to the government as early
as 1863 that they claimed full rights over the Waikato River .”
Amidst much
confused reporting as to whether the Waitangi Tribunal can or cannot make
binding recommendations, another post goes on to discuss the one and (so far)
only time that the Tribunal did order the compulsory return of land to Maori.
“That was the
Turangi township claim. The Crown had 90 days before the orders took effect,
and opted to return the lands in question during that time. So the binding
orders were never finalised.”
In another
post, Dr O’Malley describes the remarkable back-story to last year’s
re-discovery of the Pink and White Terraces, and the hitherto largely
unacknowledged role of Te Arawa as pioneers of the New Zealand tourism industry.
Vincent says
that he hopes to encourage other historians to contribute to the blog over
time, and to branch out into other activities such as book reviews and notices
of forthcoming conferences and other events.
The blog can
be found at http://www.themeetingplacenz.blogspot.co.nz/
Vincent O’Malley
holds a PhD from Victoria University of Wellington and is a founding partner of
Wellington
research consultancy HistoryWorks. He has written and edited a number of books,
including most recently The Meeting
Place : Maori and Pakeha Encounters, 1642-1840 (Auckland
University Press, 2012).
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