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MCKINNON, JOHN (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   131374


Discovering Asia / Mckinnon, John   Journal Article
Mckinnon, John Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
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2
ID:   129395


New Zealand between America and China / McKinnon, John   Journal Article
Mckinnon, John Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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3
ID:   166106


New Zealand’s China — past, present and future / McKinnon, John   Journal Article
Mckinnon, John Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract John McKinnon discusses the changing basis of the relationship and calls for transparency and consistency in our dealings with the emerging economic giant.
Key Words China  New Zealand 
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4
ID:   086374


Remembering the landing at mono: John Mckinnon describes a visit to Mono Island, the scene of and important New Zealand world war in which his father took part / Mckinnon, John   Journal Article
Mckinnon, John Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract My visit to Mono took most of monday, 27 October 2008, the actual date of the 65th anniversary of the landing of the New Zealand 3rd Division's 8th Brigade on Mono. We left Honiara about 8 am.
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5
ID:   097889


Ways of seeing environmental change: Participatory research engagement in Yunnan, China, with ethnic minority Hani participants / McKinnon, John   Journal Article
Mckinnon, John Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract In this article, I reflect on a participatory learning and action (PLA) and participatory geographic information system (PGIS) project undertaken in two adjacent Hani villages in southern Yunnan, China. After a lengthy process to gain research authorisations, Hani villagers worked with a group of visiting researchers (Hani, Han Chinese and New Zealanders) to articulate local visions of land-use change and environmental challenges. PLA exercises produced a diverse range of hand-made and PGIS products over a 10-week period. As villagers became more accustomed to the 'outsider team', methods - both designed and spontaneous - diversified. Afterwards, based on the results and acting on their own initiative, local leaders backed by popular support moved quickly to reassert traditional and ritually prescribed Hani conservation measures. Nevertheless, these endogenously driven solutions were not necessarily universally beneficial. In describing the complexities encountered in implementing a participatory framework and the ambiguities of the outcomes engendered, I argue that privileging local coherence and celebrating such participatory approaches should not be done at the expense of ignoring the intricacies of on-going contradictory behaviours in a rapidly changing arena. Yet, in China, where authorities often remain suspicious of those seeking to undertake long-term fieldwork, especially among ethnic minorities, PLA offers a potential route forward.
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