anthropology; history; The Pacific; Polynesia; Oceania; ethnology; ethnography
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  3. Vol. 122 No. 4 (2013)

Vol. 122 No. 4 (2013)

					View Vol. 122 No. 4 (2013)
Published: 2014-04-08

Notes and News

  • Cover, imprint, contents, Notes on Authors

    305-310

Articles

  • Wetland Archaeology and the Study of Late Māori Settlement Patterns and Social Organisation in Northern New Zealand

    Geoffrey Irwin
    311-332
    • PDF
  • Mythic Origins of Moral Evil: Moral Fatalism and the Tragic Self-Conception of the Mekeo

    Alan Jones
    333-372
    • PDF
  • Reterritorialising Kinship: The Māori Hapū

    Jeffrey Sissons
    373-392
    • PDF

Reviews

  • Review

    Hamish Macdonald
    393-395
    • PDF

Publications received

  • Publications Received

    396-397
    • PDF

Index

  • Index to Volume 122

    398-399
    • PDF

Publications of the Society

  • Publications of the Polynesian Society

    400-404
    • PDF

Complete issue

  • JPS December 2013, Vol. 122 No.4

    305-404
    • PDF

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The Polynesian Society was formed in New Zealand in 1892, co-founded by Stephenson Percy Smith and Edward Tregear. It counted Elsdon Best, W. H. Skinner, Sir Āpirana T. Ngata as some of its earlier presidents. One of the oldest learned societies in the Southern Hemisphere, its aim is to promote the scholarly study of past and present New Zealand Māori and other Pacific Island peoples and cultures.

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