Browsing by Subject "220000 Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts - General"
Now showing items 21-40 of 134
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Creative industries and cultural value.
(2008)The Creative Industries are essentially pluralist and transformative in the manner in which they conceive of knowledge creation and the attribution of value. Situated in the apex of the knowledge economy they have a capacity ... -
Cultural studies in New Zealand.
(2001) -
Culture on tour: Ethnographies of travel [book review].
(2006)Culture on tour, the recent book by reputed anthropologist (also celebrant and critic) of ethnography and tourism, Edward Bruner, realises the aim of his work in general: to �write tourism as others have written culture� ... -
Early history of New Zealand through to Te Tiriti o Waitangi/Treaty of Waitangi.
(2007)Discusses the early history of New Zealand through to the Treaty of Waitangi. -
Employment ethics: Privacy and hiring decisions.
(2006)Human rights legislation in Australia and New Zealand places restrictions on the information an employer may require from job applicants as a basis for hiring. Some of these restrictions help to maintain the privacy of ... -
Employment ethics: Privacy and hiring decisions.
(2006)Human rights legislation in Australia and New Zealand places restrictions on the information an employer may require from job applicants as a basis for hiring. Some of these restrictions help to maintain the privacy of ... -
Employment ethics: Privacy and hiring decisions.
(2006)Human rights legislation in Australia and New Zealand places restrictions on the information an employer may require from job applicants as a basis for hiring. Some of these restrictions help to maintain the privacy of ... -
Featherston's Crusoe: A female caucasion castaway in eighteenth century Aotearoa.
(2010)The discovery by Sam Tobin in 2004 of a European woman�s skull, subsequently radiocarbon dated at 300 years old, on the banks of the Ruamahanga River in South East Featherston in the lower North Island of New Zealand, ... -
Force field: Vitruvian man and the physics of sensory perception.
(2010)Leonardo Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man, a diagrammatical design of the human form in relation to its geometrical proportions, is one of the most enduring images of the European Renaissance. Vitruvian Man provides a key to the ...