Browse by category
Activism, Feminism, Politics and Parliament by Margaret Wilson
39.99 NZD
Category: Current Affairs & Politics | Reading Level: near fine
Margaret Wilson has always lived a political life. From her days as a child growing up in the Waikato in a Catholic family attuned to fairness, an unlikely law student in the 1960s in a class with a few other women, and an emerging socialist feminist who read radical texts and attended women’s conventio ...Show more
Culture, Rights and Cultural Rights: Perspectives from the South Pacific by WILSON, Margaret & HUNT Paul
34.99 NZD
Category: Maori Books
Explores the meaning of culture, identity and community in a purely Pacific context. Raises issues about the relationship between culture and rights, the appropriate balance between collective and individual rights, and practical ways to promote and protect cultural rights.
Human Rights in New Zealand: Emerging Faultlines by Judy McGregor, Sylvia Bell, Margaret Wilson
49.99 NZD
Category: NZ Non Fiction
New Zealand has long taken pride in its human rights record - and with good reason. It's not only that we were the first country in the world to give women the vote and played a prominent part in the establishment of the United Nations and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights - more recently New Ze ...Show more
The Book of the People: How to Read the Bible by A. N. Wilson; Lauren Finger (Editor); Margaret Stead (Editor)
26.99 NZD
Category: Religion
A. N. Wilson has been thinking about the Bible, and reading it, since he read theology for a year at university. Martin Luther King was 'reading the Bible' when he started the Civil Rights movement. When Michelangelo painted the fresco cycles in the Sistine Chapel, he was 'reading the Bible'. In The Boo ...Show more
The Struggle for Sovereignty - New Zealand and Twenty-First Century Statehood (BWB Texts) by Margaret Wilson
14.99 NZD
Category: NZ Non Fiction | Series: BWB texts | Reading Level: very good
In the era of public choice and free markets, does the New Zealand state still have the best interests of its individual citizens at heart? Since 1984, as Margaret Wilson argues, the shift to a neo-liberal public policy framework has profoundly affected the country's sovereignty. In this far-sighted ...Show more
0 - 4 of 5