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         Maori Indigenous Peoples:     more books (70)
  1. Rautahi: The Maoris of New Zealand (Routledge Library Editions: Anthropology and Ethnography) by Joan Metge, 2004-04-30
  2. Being Maori Chinese: Mixed Identities by Manying Ip, 2008-06-01
  3. Te Maori by D.R. Simmons, 1998-08-01
  4. A Concise Encyclopedia of Maori Myth and Legend by Margaret Rose Orbell, 1998-01
  5. Chiefs of Industry: Maori Tribal Enterprise in Early Colonial New Zealand by Hazel Petrie, 2007-04-01
  6. Whakairo: Maori Tribal Art by D. R. Simmons, 1986-01-09
  7. Eruera: The Teachings of a Maori Elder by Eruera Stirling, 1994-07-21
  8. Te Whare Runanga =: The Maori Meeting House by D. R. Simmons, 1997-01
  9. Conflict and Compromise: Essays on the Maori Since Colonisation
  10. Historical Frictions: Maori Claims and Reinvented Histories by Michael Belgrave, 2006-02-01
  11. A New Maori Migration: Rural and Urban Relations in Northern New Zealand (London School of Economics Monographs on Social Anthropology) by Joan Metge, 1964-02-01
  12. Tai Tokerau Whakairo Rakau =: Northland Maori Wood Carving by Deidre Brown, 2003-01
  13. The Reed Book of Maori Proverbs by A.E. Broughton, A.W. Reed, et all 1998-12-14
  14. Culture Counts: Changing Power Relations in Education by Russell Bishop, Ted Glynn, 2003-10-10

41. European Journal Of Social Theory -- Sign In Page
Cohan, John Alan (2002) ‘Environmental Rights of indigenous peoples under the (1989) Waitangi maori and Pakeha Perspectives of the Treaty of Waitangi.
http://est.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/7/2/189

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Anger in Legacies of Empire: Indigenous Peoples and Settler States
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42. Indigenous Peoples Council On Biocolonialism
A group of visiting indigenous peoples participating in a statewide speaking New Zealand law requires the government to minimally consult with maori
http://www.ipcb.org/issues/agriculture/htmls/2005/hawaiipr.html
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Media Release (Honolulu, February 5, 2005)
University of Hawaii Research on Genetically Engineered Taro Breaches Native Hawaiian Rights
[END]
Indigenous tour speakers can be contacted by email at the links below:
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Dr. Paul Reynolds - email

43. Databases - Maori / Indigenous Peoples - Lincoln University Library
Lincoln University Library. Databases maori and indigenous peoples indigenous peoples Documents Start searching
http://www.lincoln.ac.nz/libr/dbases/dbmaori.htm
This site requires Javascript to be enabled. Lincoln University Library
Click on the database name for more information, or click on to start searching. Academic Research Library (all subjects) Anthropological Index Online Brookers Fisheries Library (NZ fisheries legislation and case law) Brookers NZ Law Partner (Acts, Regulations and case law) Windows version (campus only) Web version Brookers Resource Management Library Windows version (campus only) Web version Census 2001 - Table Finder (NZ census data) Christchurch City Plan campus only Court of Appeal Judgments Current Contents Connect (all subjects) Dictionary of New Zealand Biography DSL Publishing Expanded Academic ASAP (all subjects) Hawaii Pacific Journal Index Index New Zealand (general, social science, current events) Index to Te Ao Hou and newspapers Indigenous Peoples Documents IngentaConnect (general serial index) IWIDEX (tribal history, tikanga-a-iwi and whakapapa)

44. Lincoln University Library : Subjects : Maori And Indigenous Peoples
maori and indigenous peoples information in books, journals and on the Web Relevant subject headings for indigenous peoples information include
http://www.lincoln.ac.nz/libr/subjects/maoriind.htm
This site requires Javascript to be enabled. Lincoln University Library Subject Guide
your guide to finding the best
information in books, journals and on the Web Find ... Books for a general overview, background or summary of the subject. Journals to browse for current issues and developments. Articles for the latest information on specific topics including recent research. Reference Databases for legislation, case law, dictionaries, and other material available electronically (rather than a paper version). Web Sites for information from a range of sources, including government, academic and commercial organisations. Statistics from a range of resources - print and electronic. If you need more help with finding the information you need - ask a librarian!
Finding Books
If you need to clarify or define your topic try the... Bateman New Zealand Encyclopedia Ref DU414 Bat 5th ed Ref DU464 Orb The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia Ref GN665 Enc Encyclopedia of Native American tribes Ref E76.2 Wal

45. 'Just World News' By Helena Cobban: Indigenous Peoples Archives
settler governments finalize an indigenous people’s dispossession, remove them from Note also in the maorilanguage second para of Article the First ,
http://justworldnews.org/archives/cat_indigenous_peoples.html
'Just World News' by Helena Cobban
Info, analysis, discussion to build a more just world
Counter-insurgencies and large-scale incarceration Today I finished writing a long article I've been working on for a while, about the role of large-scale incarcerations in colonial counter-insurgency campaigns... Well, that was was sort of what it ended up being about. It started out as something slightly different, but in this case (unlike most others) my writing process was a fairly intuitive one, so I just sort of followed the narrative where it led me, and learned a lot in the process. Yes, I'm sure you're all really eager to find out about my writing process. (Irony alert.) Well, along the way, I wrote quite a lot about the anti-Mau Mau campaign in Kenya. I borrowed acouple of Bill's books about French counter-insurgency strategies in Algeria. I talked a bit with a friend about Dutch counter-insurgency strategies in Indonesia. (Did you know that when the Japanese invaded Indonesia during World War 2, the Dutch administrators of an entire detention camp called Boven Digul escaped to Australia and took their Indonesian prisoners with them? What an interesting episode.) Anyway, the main thing I wanted to put up here is

46. Resource Centre For The Rights Of Indigenous Peoples
According to the 2001 census, one in seven New Zealanders are maori, meaning theindigenous people make up 15 per cent of the country`s population of four
http://www.galdu.org/english/index.php?odas=517

47. Indigenous Peoples And Conservation
And Meto Leach, a maori chemist from the University of Waikato, told us about the The importance of indigenous peoples to conservation was explicitly
http://www.plant-talk.org/stories/25edit.html
By Paul Alan Cox, Editor in Chief
As the lights dimmed, the last members of the audience scurried to find their seats in the darkened ballroom
The importance of indigenous peoples to conservation was explicitly recognized in the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD). Article 8j requires the signatory nations to a) respect, preserve, and maintain traditional knowledge, b) promote wide application of traditional knowledge, and c) encourage equitable sharing of benefits from traditional knowledge. Other than that brief mention, however, indigenous peoples and the importance of indigenous knowledge were largely ignored by the CBD, a situation which perhaps might be redressed in Rio +10. Yet the prospects for international recognition of indigenous peoples as stewards of threatened biodiversity are not good. Many otherwise progressive countries who have ratified the CBD remain reluctant to discuss indigenous issues, which sometimes bring up unpleasant memories of poor relationships with indigenous peoples in their own lands.
Indigenous knowledge systems are imperilled perhaps even more than threatened plants. Linguists estimate that over half of all indigenous languages disappeared in the 20th century. Of those that remain, 80% are spoken only by elderly individuals. A tongue that is no longer spoken by little children is the linguistic equivalent of an endangered species. As these indigenous languages disappear the important cultural insights they contain in conservation also disappear.

48. Austral Ed Children's Books - Books About Indigenous Peoples
This is a short list of recommended children s books on indigenous peoples.I have not included books on Australian Aborigines or on the maori people from
http://www.australed.iinet.net.au/indigenous_peoples.html
CHILDREN'S BOOKS Children's Books about Asia Australian Children's Fiction Australian Picture Books Australian Fantasy and Science Fiction ... Books about Indigenous People PYP AND MYP LISTS Professional Resource Books for the PYP Resource Books for the PYP Programme of Inquiry Literature for Discussion of the Student Profile of the Primary Years Programme Literature for discussion of the Attitudes listed in the Primary Years Programme ... Fiction from East and Southeast Asia Children's Books - Books about Indigenous Peoples AUSTRAL ED Contact Details: PO Box 227
2 Downer Ave
Belair SA 5052
AUSTRALIA Phone:
Fax: Meanki Pty. Ltd.
ABN 77 085 110 845 www.australed.iinet.net.au
email: kateshep@iinet.net.au September 2002 This is a short list of recommended children's books on Indigenous Peoples. I have not included books on Australian Aborigines or on the Maori people from New Zealand for separate lists has already been compiled. Please contact me if you would like copies. The books listed are for primary and secondary levels. Please take the recommended age levels as a rough guide.

49. IngentaConnect Technology, Education And Indigenous Peoples: The Case Of Maori
Technology, Education and indigenous peoples the case of maori. Author MarshallJD. Source Educational Philosophy and Theory, Volume 32, Number 1,
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/carfax/cept/2000/00000032/00000001/art0001

50. The Brown Pages Maori And Pacific Island Indigenous Arts And Media Directory
AN INDEPENDENT maori AND PACIFIC peoples indigenous ARTS AND MEDIA NETWORK The Brown Pages™ is a voluntary register of maori and Pacific peoples who
http://www.brownpages.co.nz/
INDEX ABOUT US
BROWN AND AROUND

TREATY OF WAITANGI

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BROWN AND AROUND
MITRE 10 MARAE DIY: NEW SEASON ON MAORI TELEVISION
Te Pou o Tainui, Otaki
October 2nd Ngati Tukorehe, Kuku, Levin October 9th Waipahihi, Taupo October 16th Puniho Pa, Taranaki October 23rd Ngai Tupoto, Hokianga November 6th Te Ore Ore, Masterton November 13th Be sure to tell all your friends and whanau! MEMORY LANE Treaty of Waitangi signed. Colonial govt. in NZ established. Treaty of Waitangi dismissed as a "simple nullity" Northern Chiefs petition Queen Victoria to investigate colonial government and establish a Maori Parliament. Maori Councils Act The Privy Council declares that the Treaty of Waitangi is not enforceable in the courts except to the extent it is incorporated into legislation Waitangi Tribunal Established THE BROWN PAGES™ AN INDEPENDENT MAORI AND PACIFIC PEOPLES' INDIGENOUS ARTS AND MEDIA NETWORK ESTABLISHED 1993 Contacts: Melissa Wikaire 0274 467922 or Iulia Leilua PO Box 14 706 Panmure, Auckland, New Zealand

51. INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND THE STATE: THE STRUGGLE FOR NATIVE RIGHTS
Indeed, Howard’s own assemblage of material on maori experience in Aotearoa NewZealand These include the status of indigenous peoples under positive
http://www.bsos.umd.edu/gvpt/lpbr/subpages/reviews/Howard1103.htm
Vol. 13 No. 11 (November 2003) INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND THE STATE: THE STRUGGLE FOR NATIVE RIGHTS by Bradley Reed Howard. DeKalb, Illinois: Northern Illinois University Press, 2003. 252 pp. Cloth $42.00. ISBN: 0-87580-290-7. Reviewed by Catherine Lane West-Newman, Department of Sociology, The University of Auckland, New Zealand. Email: l.westnewman@auckland.ac.nz The opening assertion of this well-intentioned book sets the scene for much of what follows: Parading down a technoconsumer superhighway into the new millennium, we are unintentional witnesses to an extraordinary event: a resurgence of activism among indigenous peoples, energetically asserting their international rights not only as individual human beings but as self-determining peoples, unique and independent cultures (p.2). He is right, though, in noting that framing indigenous activism in terms of international rights is comparatively new. offerings in this field need to provide new evidence, sophisticated analysis, or at least a synthesis of materials not previously available in that form.

52. The International Year For The World's Indigenous People
indigenous peoples are descendants of the original inhabitants of many lands, The Government of New Zealand and the National maori Congress are engaged
http://www.ciesin.org/docs/010-000a/Year_Worlds_Indig.html
Reproduced from: Department of Public Information, The International Year for the World's Indigenous People. 1992. Who are the world's indigenous peoples? New York: United Nations. Posting to Internet mailing list NATIVE-L, available from listserv@tamvm1.tamu.edu; INTERNET. Newsgroups: soc.culture.mexican From: NativeNet%gnosys.svle.ma.us@tamvm1.tamu.edu Subject: UN:Who are indigenous peoples? Reply-To: Multiple recipients of list NATIVE-L Lines: 215 /* Written 5:49 pm Nov 24, 1992 by unic@peg.apc.org in igc:unic.news */
WHO ARE THE WORLD'S INDIGENOUS PEOPLES?
People everywhere, often without realizing it, have been influenced by the cultures and achievements of indigenous peoples through the foods on our tables, the words in our languages and the medicines we use daily for everything from headaches to heart disease. Many of the world's staple foods, such as peppers, potatoes, lentils, peas, sugar cane, garlic and tomatoes, were first cultivated by indigenous peoples. From the various indigenous languages of the Americas come familiar words like canoe, barbecue, squash, powwow and moccasin. An estimated 75 per cent of the world's plant-based pharmaceuticals, including aspirin, digitalis and quinine, have been derived from medicinal plants found in tribal areas. Indeed, the contribution of indigenous peoples to modern civilization is pervasive. Indigenous peoples are descendants of the original inhabitants of many lands, strikingly varied in their cultures, religions and patterns of social and economic organization. At least 5,000 indigenous groups can be distinguished by linguistic and cultural differences and by geographical separation. Some are hunters and gatherers, while others live in cities and participate fully in the culture of their national society. But all indigenous peoples retain a strong sense of their distinct cultures, the most salient feature of which is a special relationship to the land.

53. The Maori Of New Zealand - Indigenous Peoples And Fiscal Relationships: The Inte
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada strives to make Canada a better place forFirst Nations and Northern peoples. To learn more, click here.
http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/pr/ra/ipf/mnz_e.html
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Development
2 - The Maori of New Zealand
2.1 Introduction
The Maori are the people indigenous to New Zealand. They comprise between 10 and 15 per cent of New Zealand’s population or roughly half a million people. This is by far the largest indigenous population share of any of the groups studied. The Maori are also the only group guaranteed political representation in their State parliament commensurate with their population share. As a result, they are a powerful political force. This political strength is reflected in Cabinet, where three of twenty Ministers are Maori. Maori was made an official language of New Zealand in 1974. Despite their political power, the same depressing social indicators which plague Canada’s First Nations characterize the Maori. These include higher rates of unemployment, incarceration, suicide, lower incomes and rates of educational attainment. Much like First Nation peoples, the Maori are younger and faster growing than the general population of New Zealand. There is a growing realization that, if unchecked, these social and demographic characteristics will lead to sharp increases in the future costs of government services and reductions in average living standards. The Maori are more culturally homogenous than are First Nations peoples. All Maori speak the same language, apart from variations of dialect and think of themselves as being the same people and belonging to the same culture. Historically, their most important form of social organization was and probably still is, the hapu. The hapu loosely corresponds to a sub-tribe, though in some references it is likened to a kinship society.

54. Indigenous Peoples Preview Document - SDM
indigenous peoples on the Gateway a community promoting knowledge exchanges For the indigenous people of New Zealand, the maori, the biggest problem is
http://topics.developmentgateway.org/indigenous/sdm/previewDocument.do~activeDoc
English Home About Us My Gateway Feedback ... Indigenous Issues > Highlight: Transparency f... Has the Internet increased government transparency for indigenous people?
Read comments from Ecuador, Nepal, New Zealand and Sudan
April 06, 2005 Gaining public access to government procedures is an important step for indigenous people who have been marginalized in their countries. The growing movement toward e-government, where countries post government documents on the Internet, holds much promise for advancing public sector transparency. How are indigenous people being served by e-government? The Development Gateway interviewed indigenous people from four countries who attended the WSIS Indigenous Thematic Planning Conference in Ottawa, Ontario, on March 18, 2005. Ecuador: Knowing Rights to Access Information Comes First Mirian Masaquiza, Quechua
Programme Specialist, UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
Since 1998, when the government of Ecuador recognized indigenous people as part of society, indigenous peoples have participated in elections through the movement called Pachakutik. In the latest elections in 2004, Pachakutik won 17 municipalities where all the mayors are now indigenous. One indigenous mayorMario Conejo from Otavaloposted a website about important activities in his municipality so that people can see how much of what he is doing corresponds to what he promised during the election. Otavalo is a commercial city where people have telephone connections and Internet access. However, in other communities these facilities do not exist. Where there is nothing, not even telephone connections, it is difficult to set up a website.

55. ALA | Internet Resources: Indigenous Nations
There are numerous quality Internet resources about indigenous peoples, James Henare maori Research Centre. Based at the University of Auckland,
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/crlnews/backissues2004/crlbackjan504/indige
ALA American Library Association Search ALA Contact ALA ... Login Quicklinks Career Opportunities Chapters CHOICE Committees Directory of Leadership e-Learning Forms Information Literacy Marketing @ your library Publications Catalog RBM Recruiting to the Profession Scholarly Communication Sections Tipsheets Publications
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Back Issues: 2005

Back Issues: 2004
... Back Issues: 2004 January
INTERNET RESOURCES
Indigenous nations: Sites of interest
January 2004
Vol. 65, No. 1 by Gina Matesic
Research in the area of indigenous nations is inherently multidisciplinary, and any researcher soon discovers the layers of historical, legal, political, environmental, and cultural contexts throughout the information-gathering process. Digitized historical documents, maps, government reports (both historical and contemporary), legal cases, and specialized educational curriculum are accessible to researchers. Librarians in the field must perceive library resources in the broadest manner to be most effective to these researchers. Luckily, these efforts are facilitated through the hypertext and visual nature of the Internet.
There are numerous quality Internet resources about indigenous peoples, individual communities, organizations, and particular topics. In addition to nonindigenous resources, strong effort has been made to include Internet resources created and maintained by indigenous peoples or nations. Increasingly, these groups have used the Internet to communicate and disseminate information about their communities and issues that affect their lives. This column contains a selective list of resources that cover international and regional resources. The term

56. World Libraries Preface Indigenous Peoples And Librarianship
The maori are the indigenous people of New Zealand, a country they refer to asAotearoa, Land of the Long White Cloud. Polynesians arrived on Aotearoa by
http://chrisdaydesign.com/worldlib/vol12no1/roy_preface_v12n1.shtml

57. Project: Maori Cultural And Intellectual Property Rights: An Anthropological App
legal and economic discourses of indigenous maori people and the New Zealandgovernment and indigenous peoples and modern nationstates in general.
http://www.onderzoekinformatie.nl/en/oi/nod/onderzoek/OND1266802/toon
Login English KNAW Research Information NOD - Dutch Research Database ... Research entire www.onderzoekinformatie.nl site fuzzy match
Project: Maori cultural and intellectual property rights: an anthropological approach of indigenous rights and international law
Print View Titel Maori cultural and intellectual property rights: an anthropological approach of indigenous rights and international law Abstract Period Status completed Related organisations
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58. E LAW | Dedicated Parliamentary Seats For Indigenous Peoples: Political Represen
Will Kymlicka has paid attention to indigenous peoples in particular and B17 Crown law Officers ruled in 1859 that maori communal tenure did not
http://www.murdoch.edu.au/elaw/issues/v10n4/iorns104_notes.html
Notes
See Parliament of NSW, Standing Committee on Social Issues, Enhancing Aboriginal Political Representation: Inquiry into Dedicated Seats in the New South Wales Parliament (Report No. 18, November 1998). This is discussed I more detail in Part V, below. Australia is not alone is considering such a system of representation. The American state of Wisconsin is in the process of adopting such a system for First Nations tribal delegates and the country of Colombia recently established one. Separate Aboriginal representation through separate electoral districts was recommended in Canada but that recommendation has not been pursued. Legal, Constitutional and Administrative Review Committee of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland, Hands On Parliament: A Parliamentary Committee Inquiry into Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples’ Participation in Queensland’s Democratic Processes (Report No. 42, September 2003), Recommendation 24 on “Dedicated Seats,” at p.56. While it is justified in differing ways, it is recognised as being at least a practical requirement: while government may rest on the consent of all of the governed, effective government requires decisive decision-making, which is justified if it carries the support of a majority. There are many constitutional devices adopted to restrain majorities, including those that focus on the structure of the state (e.g., federalism), on the division of powers between different decision-making bodies (e.g., checks and balances, the separation of powers, and judicial review), on the structure of the legislative body (e.g., bicameralism), on the electoral system (e.g., proportional electoral systems), on decision-making processes within deliberative bodies (e.g., qualified majorities and veto rights), as well as on the substance of possible decisions (e.g., bills of rights).

59. Arctic: INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND GLOBAL RIGHTS
Full text of the article, indigenous peoples RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND GLOBALRIGHTS Bjorn Hersoug s chapter on maori fishing rights illustrates the
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3712/is_200403/ai_n9346085
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Arctic Mar 2004
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND GLOBAL RIGHTS Arctic Mar 2004 by Korsmo, Fae L
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND GLOBAL RIGHTS. Edited with contributions by SVEIN JENTOFT, HENRY MINDE, and RAGNAR NILSEN. Delft, The Netherlands: Eburon Academic Publishers, 2003. ix + 315 p., maps, bib. Softbound. Euro 27,50. The volume's detailed case studies, broad overviews, and theoretical discussions are divided into three sections: the world, the sea, and the land. I did not find the division useful, however. Instead, the contributions cluster more naturally around the following themes: indigenous mobilization and identity; the continuing conflicts surrounding natural resource allocation and the practice of fishing, hunting, and herding; and the translation of societal values-biodiversity and sustainability-into international and national legal frameworks, such as treaties, laws, regulations, and co-management arrangements.

60. Historical Journal Of Film, Radio And Television: Electronic Media And Indigenou
Full text of the article, Electronic Media and indigenous peoples A Voice ofOur Own? In other words, do media historians unwittingly share the maori
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2584/is_n3_v17/ai_20769353
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Afterimage American Drama American Music Teacher ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Electronic Media and Indigenous Peoples: A Voice of Our Own? Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television August, 1997 by James Schwoch
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Donald Browne has produced an interesting and valuable new book that in many ways stands in contradistinction to his early study, Comparing Broadcast Systems: the experiences of six industrialized nations (1989). While both books share a commitment to rigorous research and extensive documentation, Comparing Broadcast Systems exemplifies the utilization of the nation-state as the primary unit of analysis, while Electronic Media and Indigenous Peoples places the nation-state on the wings and backdrops and allows indigenous, rather than statist, units to take center stage in the analytical process. Very few researchers could produce the quality work in both approaches that Browne offers, and Electronic Media and Indigenous Peoples reaffirms Browne's well-earned reputation as one of the leading comparativists of media studies.

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