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According to NZ Historian Jock Phillips, while Americans took away military/political lessons from the Vietnam War, New Zealand came away with a new sense of national identity. Opposition to the war was couched in nationalistic terms, because like many Commonwealth countries at that time, New Zealanders were carving out a post-colonial role.
Te Ara was developed between 2001 and 2014 and edited by historian Jock Phillips, who oversaw a full-time staff of about 20 writers, editors, image and resource researchers and designers during its creation. [5] In 2010 during the development of the encyclopedia, the decision was made to integrate the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography into Te ...
This focus on social history that explored class and social relationships, was said by historian Jock Phillips to be an area pioneered by Olssen. [13] According to Tony Ballantyne and Brian Moloughney from the University of Otago, Olssen's work significantly shaped understandings of "New Zealand's political traditions, intellectual culture and ...
J. J. Phillips (born 1944), American poet; Jock Phillips (born 1947), New Zealand historian; Joel Daniel Phillips (born 1989), American artist; Joker Phillips (born 1963), American football player and coach; Jonas Phillips (1736–1803), American soldier and merchant; Jonas B. Phillips (1805–1867), American poet
She was married for many years to Jock Phillips, a university colleague and noted historian. [1] The couple divorced in 1993, before Bunkle was elected to Parliament. [ 3 ]
Jock is a Scottish diminutive form of the forename "John"; It is also a nickname for someone of Scottish origin, as well as being the collective name for Scottish soldiers, collectively known as "the Jocks". It corresponds to Jack in England and Wales. In London the rhyming slang "sweaty" is used, deriving from "Sweaty sock - Jock". The name ...
Caroline Daley is a New Zealand social historian, and is a full professor of history at the University of Auckland. She is the dean of graduate studies at Auckland. Daley has appeared regularly on Radio New Zealand's show The Panel. She is interested in New Zealand social history, gender and body history, and the history of leisure.
As historian Jock Phillips said of Scott: "although he had not met a Māori person until the age of 20 and did not know te Reo, he recognised injustice immediately when he came across it and became convinced the story should be told." [2]