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Jacinta Ruru is the Deputy Vice-Chancellor Māori and a Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Otago.
A beautiful new coffee-table book brings together some of Aotearoa's most renowned Maori thinkers in a wide-ranging korero about the influence and empowerment of Maori writing. Books of Mana is a collection of 180 Maori-authored books.
Books of Mana is a new book edited by Jacinta Ruru (Raukawa, Ngāti Ranginui), Angela Wanhalla (Kāi Tahu) and Jeanette Wikaira (Ngāti Pukenga, Ngāti Tamaterā, Ngāpuhi) which released earlier this week. It is the first of its kind in the world to celebrate non-fiction indigenous writing – exploring 200 years of Māori print legacies. In examining the ways 180 selected books have enriched lives and helped to foster understanding of the Māori experience, both at home in Aotearoa and internationally, the book is a clear vision of influence, excellence and diversity of Māori writing. Sofia spoke with co-editor and Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Otago, Jacinta Ruru, about Books of Mana.
Our Bookmarks guest today has made history more than once Maori Professor Jacinta Ruru is with Jesse for Bookmarks this week.
The lasting ripples of Witi Ihimaera's work spreads far beyond the horizon, spillling into the hearts of those who most need it. Listen as Aotearoa's first professor of law-Jacinta Ruru shares her experience and early interactions with Witi Ihimaera's work. This Dunedin Writers and Readers Festival podcast was brought to you with support from Otago Access Radio, Copyright Licensing New Zealand and Dunedin UNESCO City of Literature. You'll find further podcasts from the 2023 festival at http://dunedinwritersfestival.co.nz and from Otago Access Radio's website http://oar.org.nz
Around the world a growing number of rivers, mountains, nature reserves, even marshes have all been given legal rights. It's an idea that's being tested in courtrooms around the world. But to what extent might this help reduce the worst impacts of climate change and help us adapt to a warmer and wetter world? Presenters Kate Lamble and Neal Razzell are joined by: Natalia Greene , Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature John DX Lapid, reporter in the Philippines Liza Osorio, lawyer Jacinta Ruru, Professor of Law at the University of Otago, Aotearoa/New Zealand Jan Darpo, Professor of Environmental Law, Uppsala University, Sweden Producer: Darin Graham Researcher: Natasha Fernandes Series producer: Ros Jones Editor: Emma Rippon Sound engineer: James Beard
CLIMATE ACTION SHOWOCTOBER 25TH 2021 - Produced by Vivien Langford WOMEN CLIMATE LEADERS inLaw, Media, Trade Unions, First Nations and YouthGuests:Professor Jacinta Ruru - Co-Director, Nga Pae o te Maramatanga, New Zealand's Māori Centre of Research ExcellenceNga Pae o te Maramatanga. Otago University Aotearoa.Article : If the hills could sue: Jacinta Ruru on legal personality and a Māori worldview | The Spinoff Amy Goodman - Journalist and founder of Democracy Now! | Democracy Now! Irene Hong Ping Shen - Trade Unions for Energy Democracy – Energy Democracy Project Amelia Goonerage - Global Voices who will be attending COP 26 in Glasgow Amelia Telford - Seed Mob - We are Seed Mob - Bing video Osprey Orielle Lake - Director of WECAN . You can watch all six days of the Women and Earthn Alliance conference2021 Women's Climate Assembly | WECAN International Kae Guajajara - Song Essa Rua e Minha from Brazilian Amazonas Kaê Guajajara e Nelson D - Essa Rua é Minha (webclipe) - YouTube Mama Mihirangi and the Mareikura - Māmā Mihirangi & the Māreikura - Live Backstage in the Caravan Bluesfest 2019 - YouTube“Mama Mihirangi & The Mareikura were an outstanding trio of fierce, fiery and friendly Maori women from New Zealand." Breaking NEWS from UN Secretary Antonio Guterres at a COP 26 briefing for media "The carbon pollution of a handful of countrieshas brought humanity to its knees and they bearthe greatest responsibility."
Since its release He Puapua has been hitting headlines across the motu. He Puapua is a report which considers how our laws and policies in Aotearoa New Zealand can be adapted to become consistent with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). In this episode Dr. Claire Charters, Prof. Jacinta Ruru, who are both co-writers of He Puapua, and Max Harris share their whakaaro about the report, what it is, where it has come from, and importantly, what it isn't. Read the redacted version of He Puapua here: https://www.tpk.govt.nz/docs/undrip/tpk-undrip-he-puapua.pdf Te Takarangi Celebrating Māori Publications: https://www.royalsociety.org.nz/150th-anniversary/tetakarangi/ Read Our Words: An anti-racist reading list for New Zealanders by Jacinta Ruru, Angela Wanhalla & Jeanette Wikaira: https://thespinoff.co.nz/atea/15-06-2020/read-our-words-an-anti-racist-reading-list-for-new-zealanders/
Māori Scholars at the Research Interface. Co-editor of Ngā Kete Mātauranga: Māori Scholars at the Research Interface, Jacinta Ruru describes this beautiful and transformative book as “an opportunity to provide New Zealanders with an insight into how Mātauranga is positively influencing the Western-dominated disciplines of knowledge in the research sector”. In these pages, Māori academics share what being Māori has meant for them in their work. Jacinta, in conversation with the Te Kai a te Rangatira editors, will speak to the process of creating the book and the influence of Mātauranga on the academic sector.
“Step through the gateway now to stories that are as relevant today as they ever were,” invites master storyteller Witi Ihimaera. He will talk with Jacinta Ruru about his latest book, Navigating the Stars: Māori Creation Myths, in which he traces the history of Māori people through their creation myths, bringing them to the twenty-first century.
Jacinta Ruru (on 'Ngā Kete Matauranga' and 'Navigating the Stars' at Dunedin Writers and Readers Festival 2021) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Jacinta Ruru (on 'Ngā Kete Matauranga' and 'Navigating the Stars' at Dunedin Writers and Readers Festival 2021) Interview by Jamie Green on Radio One 91fm Dunedin
Award-winning Professor of Law at Otago University Jacinta Ruru discusses the book Nga Kete Matauranga, Maori Scholars at the Research Interface Broadcast on Otago Access Radio www.oar.org.nz
Just five percent of the tertiary sector's teaching and research staff are Māori - a statistic that remains stubbornly low. A new book has brought together the stories of 24 Māori academics, allowing them to detail how they've worked in their respective fields to bring their mātauranga - or Māori knowledge - to their work. The book, Ngā Kete Mātauranga: Māori Scholars at the Research Interface, seeks to demonstrate how mātauranga can positively influence Western-dominated disciplines of knowledge in the research sector. Kathryn talks to the co-editors of the book, Professor Jacinta Ruru from Otago University and Professor Linda Waimarie Nikora from the University of Auckland.
Just five percent of the tertiary sector's teaching and research staff are Māori - a statistic that remains stubbornly low. A new book has brought together the stories of 24 Māori academics, allowing them to detail how they've worked in their respective fields to bring their mātauranga - or Māori knowledge - to their work. The book, Ngā Kete Mātauranga: Māori Scholars at the Research Interface, seeks to demonstrate how mātauranga can positively influence Western-dominated disciplines of knowledge in the research sector. Kathryn talks to the co-editors of the book, Professor Jacinta Ruru from Otago University and Professor Linda Waimarie Nikora from the University of Auckland.
En nyzeeländsk flod, Whanganui, fick 2017 som första flod i världen juridisk status som en person. Floden har alltså lagliga rättigheter och skyldigheter precis som en person eller ett företag. I praktiken betyder det att alla som nyttjar flodens resurser måste ta hänsyn till hur det påverkar hela floden, allt från skogarna runt omkring ner till alger och fiskar som lever i den. Det är ursprungsbefolkningen, maorierna, som i decennier kämpat för att deras natursyn ska respekteras. I programmet hörs Ben Potaka, fiskare och landägare Whanganui, Gerrard Albert, styrelsemedlem i Ng Tngata Tiaki o Whanganui, Hamish McDouall, borgmästare i Whanganui, Jacinta Ruru, professor i juridik på Univerity of Otago i Dunedin. Programmet är en repris från maj 2018. Jenny Berndtsson Djurvall vet@sverigesradio.se
Förra året fick en nyzeeländsk flod, Whanganui, som första flod i världen juridisk status som en person. Floden har alltså lagliga rättigheter och skyldigheter precis som en person eller ett företag. I praktiken betyder det att alla som nyttjar flodens resurser måste ta hänsyn till hur det påverkar hela floden, allt från skogarna runt omkring ner till alger och fiskar som lever i den. Det är ursprungsbefolkningen, maorierna, som i decennier kämpat för att deras natursyn ska respekteras. I programmet hörs Ben Potaka, fiskare och landägare Whanganui, Gerrard Albert, styrelsemedlem i Ng Tngata Tiaki o Whanganui, Hamish McDouall, borgmästare i Whanganui, Jacinta Ruru, professor i juridik på Univerity of Otago i Dunedin. Jenny Berndtsson Djurvall vet@sverigesradio.se
In this Inaugural Professorial Lecture, Professor Jacinta Ruru anchors her research journey within this Māori proverb to help bring alive the endurance and 'foreverness' of the Māori world in Aotearoa. Professor Ruru shares the ways in which she has sought to contribute towards challenging the law to more respectfully recognise and embrace Indigenous peoples' authority, laws, values, rights and responsibilities to own, govern and manage land and water. 12 September 2016
In this Inaugural Professorial Lecture, Professor Jacinta Ruru anchors her research journey within this Māori proverb to help bring alive the endurance and 'foreverness' of the Māori world in Aotearoa. Professor Ruru shares the ways in which she has sought to contribute towards challenging the law to more respectfully recognise and embrace Indigenous peoples' authority, laws, values, rights and responsibilities to own, govern and manage land and water. 12 September 2016
In this Inaugural Professorial Lecture, Professor Jacinta Ruru anchors her research journey within this Māori proverb to help bring alive the endurance and 'foreverness' of the Māori world in Aotearoa. Professor Ruru shares the ways in which she has sought to contribute towards challenging the law to more respectfully recognise and embrace Indigenous peoples' authority, laws, values, rights and responsibilities to own, govern and manage land and water. 12 September 2016
In this Inaugural Professorial Lecture, Professor Jacinta Ruru anchors her research journey within this Māori proverb to help bring alive the endurance and 'foreverness' of the Māori world in Aotearoa. Professor Ruru shares the ways in which she has sought to contribute towards challenging the law to more respectfully recognise and embrace Indigenous peoples’ authority, laws, values, rights and responsibilities to own, govern and manage land and water. 12 September 2016
In this Inaugural Professorial Lecture, Professor Jacinta Ruru anchors her research journey within this Māori proverb to help bring alive the endurance and 'foreverness' of the Māori world in Aotearoa. Professor Ruru shares the ways in which she has sought to contribute towards challenging the law to more respectfully recognise and embrace Indigenous peoples’ authority, laws, values, rights and responsibilities to own, govern and manage land and water. 12 September 2016
In this Inaugural Professorial Lecture, Professor Jacinta Ruru anchors her research journey within this Māori proverb to help bring alive the endurance and 'foreverness' of the Māori world in Aotearoa. Professor Ruru shares the ways in which she has sought to contribute towards challenging the law to more respectfully recognise and embrace Indigenous peoples’ authority, laws, values, rights and responsibilities to own, govern and manage land and water. 12 September 2016
Jacinta Ruru of the Faculty of Law presents the 2011 Carl Smith Lecture on the topic “Undefined and Unresolved: Maori Legal Rights to Water”. 16 April 2011.
Jacinta Ruru of the Faculty of Law presents the 2011 Carl Smith Lecture on the topic “Undefined and Unresolved: Maori Legal Rights to Water”. 16 April 2011.
Jacinta Ruru of the Faculty of Law presents the 2011 Carl Smith Lecture on the topic “Undefined and Unresolved: Maori Legal Rights to Water”. 16 April 2011.
Round table with Malcolm Mulholland, Massey University, editor of Weeping Waters: The Treaty of Waitangi and Constitutional Change (Huia 2010): "How appropriately is New Zealand symbolised in the current flag, name of the country, and national anthem, and should they be changed? The Centre for Research on National Identity - Symbolising New Zealand conference. Panel: Malcolm Mulholland, Grant Gillett, Jacinta Ruru, Tony Ballantyne and Murray Rae. Held September 10, 2010.
Mick Abbott and Jacinta Ruru present "100% Landscape". The Centre for Research on National Identity - Symbolising New Zealand conference. Held September 10, 2010.
Mick Abbott and Jacinta Ruru present "100% Landscape". The Centre for Research on National Identity - Symbolising New Zealand conference. Held September 10, 2010.
Round table with Malcolm Mulholland, Massey University, editor of Weeping Waters: The Treaty of Waitangi and Constitutional Change (Huia 2010): "How appropriately is New Zealand symbolised in the current flag, name of the country, and national anthem, and should they be changed? The Centre for Research on National Identity - Symbolising New Zealand conference. Panel: Malcolm Mulholland, Grant Gillett, Jacinta Ruru, Tony Ballantyne and Murray Rae. Held September 10, 2010.
Mick Abbott and Jacinta Ruru present "100% Landscape". The Centre for Research on National Identity - Symbolising New Zealand conference. Held September 10, 2010.
Round table with Malcolm Mulholland, Massey University, editor of Weeping Waters: The Treaty of Waitangi and Constitutional Change (Huia 2010): "How appropriately is New Zealand symbolised in the current flag, name of the country, and national anthem, and should they be changed? The Centre for Research on National Identity - Symbolising New Zealand conference. Panel: Malcolm Mulholland, Grant Gillett, Jacinta Ruru, Tony Ballantyne and Murray Rae. Held September 10, 2010.
With one-third of Aotearoa New Zealand in public conservation, what visions and challenges exist for its future development and management? On Friday 10th July, the University of Otago Research Cluster for Natural Resources Law tackled these issues head-on at a significant symposium entitled The Future of Public Conservation Lands and Waters. Maori owned parks: should iwi be given title to specific parks? Jacinta Ruru, Faculty of Law.
With one-third of Aotearoa New Zealand in public conservation, what visions and challenges exist for its future development and management? On Friday 10th July, the University of Otago Research Cluster for Natural Resources Law tackled these issues head-on at a significant symposium entitled The Future of Public Conservation Lands and Waters. Maori owned parks: should iwi be given title to specific parks? Jacinta Ruru, Faculty of Law.
A forum to explore the rights of Indigenous peoples to be involved in the governance of freshwater. Jacinta Ruru, senior law lecturer, University of Otago and Coordinator of Otago's Research Cluster for Natural Resources Law, "The common law doctrine of native title possibilities".
A forum to explore the rights of Indigenous peoples to be involved in the governance of freshwater. Jacinta Ruru, senior law lecturer, University of Otago and Coordinator of Otago's Research Cluster for Natural Resources Law, "The common law doctrine of native title possibilities".
A forum to explore the rights of Indigenous peoples to be involved in the governance of freshwater. Jacinta Ruru, senior law lecturer, University of Otago and Coordinator of Otago's Research Cluster for Natural Resources Law, "The common law doctrine of native title possibilities".