Abstract
The first European to discover New Zealand was Tasman in 1642. The coast was explored by Capt. Cook in 1769. From about 1800 onwards, New Zealand became a resort for whalers and traders, chiefly from Australia. By the Treaty of Waitangi, in 1840, between Governor William Hobson and the representatives of the Maori race, the Maori chiefs ceded the sovereignty to the British Crown and the islands became a British colony. Then followed a steady stream of British settlers.
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Books of Reference
Statistical Information: The central statistical office for New Zealand is the Department of Statistics (Wellington, 1).
The beginning of a statistical serviee may be seen in the early ‘Blue books’ prepared annually from 1840 onwards under the direction of the Colonial Secretary, and designed primarily for the information of the Colonial Office in England. A permanent statistical authoritv was created in 1858. The Department of Statistics functions under the Statistics Act 1975 and reports to Parliament through the Minister of Statistics. A comprehensive statistical service has been developed to meet national requirements, and close contact is maintained with the United Nations Statistical Office and other international statistical organizations; through the Conference of Asian Statisticians assistance is being given with the development of statistics in the region.
The oldest publications consist of (a) census results from 1858 onwards and (b) annual volumes of statistics (first published 1858 but covering years back to 1853). Main current publications:
New Zealand Official Yearbook. Annual, from 1893
Catalogue oj Sew Zealand Statistics. 1972
Statistical Reports of Sew Zealand. Annual
Monthly Abstract of Statistics. From 1914
Pocket ‘Digest of Statistics’. Annual. 1927–31.1938 ff
Parliatucntary Reports of Government Departments. Annual
Pacific Islands Yearbook. Sydney, 1977
Dictionary of Sew Zealand Biography. 2 vols. Wellington. 1940
Encyclopaedia of Sew Zealand. 3 vols. Wellington, 1966
Salional Bibliography Wellington, 1968
Alley, R., Sew Zealand and the Pacific. Boulder, 1983
Bedggood, D., Rich and Poor in Sew Zealand. Sydney. 1980
Bush, G., Local Government and Politics in Sew Zealand. Sydney. 1980
Easton, B., Social Policy and the Welfare Slate in Sew Zealand. Auckland, 1980
Grover, R. F., New Zealand. [Bibliography] Oxford and Santa Barbara, 1981
Holcroft, M. H., The Shaping of Sew Zealand. Auckland. 1975
Kennaway, R., Jackson, K., Henderson, J. (eds.) Beyond New Zealand: The Foreign Policy of a Small State. Auckland, 1980
Levinc, S. (ed.). Politics in Sew Zealand. London, 1978.— The Sew Zealand Political System. London. 1979
Morrell, W. R, and Hall, D. O. W., A History of Sew Zealand Life. Christchurch and London, 1957
Oliver, W. H.(ed.), The Oxford History of New Zealand. OLJP, 1981
Robson, J. L. (ed.). Sew Zealand: The Development of its Laws and Constitution. 2nd ed. London. 1967
Shadbolt, M. F. R., The Shell Guide to Sew Zealand. Christchurch, 1976
Sinclair, K., A History of New Zealand. Rev.ed. London. 1980
Traue, J. E., Who’s Who in New Zealand. 11th ed. Wellington, 1978
Wards, I., A Descriptive Atlas of New Zealand. Wellington, Government Printer. 1976
Wise’s New Zealand Guide. 7th ed. Auckland. 1979
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© 1984 Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited
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Paxton, J. (1984). New Zealand. In: Paxton, J. (eds) The Statesman’s Year-Book. The Statesman’s Yearbook. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230271135_119
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230271135_119
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, London
Online ISBN: 978-0-230-27113-5
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