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From its earliest days, the society published the quarterly Journal of the Polynesian Society, which became the society's principal means to publish information about the indigenous peoples of Polynesia, Melanesia, and Micronesia. The journal is a rich repository of the traditions of Oceania. Its first editors were S. Percy Smith and Edward ...
The Journal of the Polynesian Society 106, no. 4 (1997): 323–374. Tapsell, Paul, and Christine Woods. "A spiral of innovation framework for social entrepreneurship: Social innovation at the generational divide in an indigenous context." Emergence: Complexity and Organization 10, no. 3 (2008): 25. Tapsell, Paul. "Taonga: A tribal response to ...
When Smith established the Polynesian Society in 1892 with the intention of promoting interest in and discussion of Polynesian history and culture, Best became a foundation member. [1] For the Society's first edition of its Journal he wrote an article on the people of the Philippines. He also began a series of publications concerning the ...
Crocombe is also the author of numerous academic journal articles, including in The Contemporary Pacific, [7] The Journal of Pacific History, [8] Comparative Education, [9] and The Journal of the Polynesian Society. [10]
New Zealander Derek Freeman carried out excavations in the early 1940s and published his report in the Journal of the Polynesian Society of New Zealand, in 1944. He found an 'elaborate system of platforms' constructed of lava rocks raised to a height of about 2–3 feet above the cave floor, stone adzes typical of the prehistoric types found in ...
Archived (PDF) from the original on 2015-10-03. Nukuoro, photographs (1969). Los atolones occidentales de Pohnpei (Estados Federados de Micronesia). 4ª parte. (Spanish) Nukuoro, Kapingamarangi and Minto atolls. An outline of the structure of the language of Nakuoro (Part 2, 1965), Vern Carroll, Journal of the Polynesian Society, Auckland ...
The Journal of the Polynesian Society 113, no. 1: 57–72. Miler, Robert J., and Jacinta Ruru. (2008). "An Indigenous Lens into Comparative Law: The Doctrine of Discovery in the United States and New Zealand." West Virginia Law Review 111: 849. Ruru, Jacinta. (2009). The legal voice of Māori in freshwater governance: a literature review.
The caves were explored and excavated in the early 1940s by New Zealand anthropologist Derek Freeman [2] who published his report in the Journal of the Polynesian Society in 1944. [1] Platforms constructed of stacked rocks, charcoal, stone adzes and marine shells were found in the caves.