Jerrad Hampton,Alireza Doostanries have. Gender plays a fundamental role in our understanding of war since it affects how past lived experiences become situated in everyday resettlement practices in the home. I present the stories of Anjali and Jayamala—two Tamil refugee women—through a gendered lens about the war and their ever
Jon C. Helton,Clifford W. Hansen,Cédric J. Salaberry turn of last century, and their recovery of statutory control over Te Urewera, their traditional mountain sanctuary, in 2014. These discussions are concluded with a preview of Volume 2 on the Crown’s betrayal of the Urewera District Native Reserve (UDNR) in the period 1915–1926 and summary of some
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Christopher
K. Wiklen the situation and the thin and inconsistent primary sources, it focuses on the questions of the legitimacy of Tūhoe representation and identification of the Crown’s intentions. While most other accounts are neutral or skeptical, I conclude that the Tūhoe representatives were established leaders ab