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New Zealand
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New Zealand

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The little spotted kiwi is one of three species of kiwi found in New Zealand. Kiwis have a good sense of smell – rare among birds – which is used to locate worms for food. The nostrils are at the tip of the pointed bill.
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Geothermal activity at Rotorua in the Bay of Plenty area of New Zealand's North Island. Rotorua is in a volcanic zone, which produces hot thermal springs, geysers, and pools of boiling mud. Among the vapour is hydrogen sulphide gas, which smells like rotten eggs.
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This photo clearly shows the precipitous sides of the narrow inlet Milford Sound. Milford Sound is part of the Fiordland National Park, New Zealand.

Country in the southwest Pacific Ocean, southeast of Australia, comprising two main islands, North Island and South Island, and other small islands.

Government

New Zealand is a constitutional monarchy. As in Britain, the constitution is the gradual product of legislation, much of it passed by the British Parliament in London. The governor general represents the British monarch as formal head of state and appoints the prime minister, who chooses the cabinet. All ministers are drawn from and collectively responsible to the single-chamber legislature, the House of Representatives. This has 99 members, including four exclusively Maori constituencies, elected by universal suffrage from single-member constituencies. It has a maximum life of three years and is subject to dissolution within that period.

Following constitutional referendums in 1992 and 1993, it was agreed that from 1996 the size of the House would be increased to 120 and a semi-proportional voting system introduced.

History

New Zealand was occupied by the Polynesian Maori from about AD 850. The Dutch explorer Abel Tasman reached it in 1642, sighting the Southern Alps, but the Maori would not let him land. British influence began with the voyages of Captain James Cook, who, in search of the Southern Continent, explored the coasts in 1769–70, 1773, and 1777.

Early European settlement

The first semi-permanent European inhabitants of New Zealand were whalers and sealers. In 1771 a plan for the colonization of the country was put forward by Benjamin Franklin and the hydrographer Alexander Dalrymple, but colonization began only after the loss of Britain's American colonies had brought the penal settlement of New South Wales into contact with New Zealand. British missionaries began to arrive from 1815, and in 1826 the New Zealand Company was founded in London to encourage settlement.

Contact with European society threatened the Maori with political and economic collapse, and in 1830 Samuel Marsden, the colonial chaplain, having been moved by pleas from visiting Maoris, suggested to the governor of New South Wales the desirability of appointing a British representative in New Zealand, backed by naval visits in order to control a growing European community that was incapable of adjusting itself to change without such control. The British government sent a resident, James Busby, to the Bay of Islands, under the authority of the government of New South Wales, but Busby's attempt in 1835 to encourage the Maori to adopt a settled form of government under British protection proved unsuccessful.

New Zealand becomes a colony

The man whose influence in New Zealand was profound and enduring in this period was Edward Gibbon Wakefield, who relaunched the New Zealand Company in 1839, after its initial failure. Wakefield's efforts, despite official and missionary antagonism, to inaugurate systematic colonization marked the start of a new era in British overseas settlement. Enlisting the support of politicians, religious leaders, businessmen, and others, he eventually succeeded in making New Zealand a British colony in the full sense of the term.

In 1839 the government sent out Captain William Hobson, a naval officer, to negotiate with the Maori chiefs for the recognition of British authority, and the result was the Treaty of Waitangi (1840), the deliberately ambiguous text of which seemed to offer British control of the unruly European settlers in exchange for a nominal Maori recognition of British sovereignty (see Waitangi, Treaty of). In reality, the treaty (and the absence of unified Maori opposition to it) provided the basis for British colonial expansion in New Zealand.

Hobson was, in effect, the first British governor of New Zealand, and under him British law and government were established in the North Island, where the Maori were most numerous. The headquarters of the northern settlement was moved from the Bay of Islands to Auckland, which in 1841 became the seat of government. Around the same time, large-scale sheep farming began to be developed.

It was, nonetheless, the organized colonization schemes of the New Zealand Company that ultimately had the most influence on the character and the plan of the new colony. Under the company's aegis the town of Wellington was founded, while new colonies were established all round the coast by bodies of settlers who gave them the names of their places of origin, for example, Dunedin (the old name of Edinburgh) in Otago harbour, founded by the Free Church of Scotland in 1848, and Christchurch, founded by the Canterbury Association in 1850.

Maori discontent, engendered mainly by the encroachment of European settlers onto lands they believed had been safeguarded by the Treaty of Waitangi, resulted in war in the North Island in 1845, but the British government recalled Hobson's vacillating successor as governor, Robert Fitzroy, and sent out George Grey, governor of South Australia, who soon compelled the Bay of Islands tribes to sue for peace (1847).

Towards self-government

This was the period of Lord Durham's celebrated report on Canada, recommending the management of internal Canadian affairs by a cabinet responsible to the Canadian electorate (see Durham Report), and in relation to New Zealand the British government agreed to the view of the New Zealand Company that New Zealand should have representative institutions. An act to that effect was passed in 1846, though Grey was opposed to its proposed division of the country into European and Maori districts, it being evident to him that the Maori would never agree to a government in which they had no share. As a result, the act was suspended pending a new act of 1852. In the meantime, in 1851, New Zealand separated administratively from New South Wales, becoming a separate colony.

Though Grey had thus delayed self-government in New Zealand for six years it is still doubtful whether the colony was really ready for it in 1852. The New Zealand Constitution Act of 1852 was a liberal measure for its time and, subject to subsequent amendments, is still the basis of the constitution of New Zealand. The act did not go so far as to provide for responsible government. A motion seeking ministerial responsibility was moved in the local assembly by Wakefield, himself now a colonist, and this being almost unanimously passed, the British government acquiesced (1856).

Thus within less than two decades of the setting up of British authority in New Zealand in 1840, that authority (with only one important reservation) had been transferred to the colonists so far as their domestic affairs were concerned.

Renewed land wars

Land wars between the Maoris and the colonial settlers broke out again in 1860, with little intermission until 1870. The real cause of the outbreak of 1860 was that the tribes and their chiefs felt that their traditions and whole way of life were jeopardized by the colonists, who had now so firmly established themselves that, in the South Island, most of the land had been transferred to the crown for nominal sums, while even in the North Island where Maori settlements were much larger, the crown owned 17,600 sq km / 6,794 sq mi. The Maoris realized that they had no share or voice in the constitution; one response was the Maori King movement, a belated attempt to create a Maori state, but mutual suspicion between the Maori and European settlers made any hope of success for this movement impossible.

The failure of several campaigns against determined and resourceful Maori forces and the withdrawal of British troops in the late 1860s forced the colonial government to moderate its policy of land settlement. However, Maori losses were considerably heavier than those of the colonists, which were only a few hundred, and by the end of the war the Maori were totally demoralized.

Eventually the idea of racial partnership was to evolve, fostered by prominent Maoris and European leaders. This process was hastened by an act providing for the election of four Maori members to the House of Representatives and by the passing of the Native Schools Act.

Development in the later 19th century

Meanwhile gold had been discovered in Otago, in the valleys of the west coast of South Island (1861–65), and the resulting gold rushes led to much irregular development, largely enhanced by the ambitious plans of Julius Vogel, a gold-seeking immigrant who had become colonial treasurer and, in that capacity, introduced his famous public-works budget of 1870. Under his schemes 100,000 immigrants were brought into the country; railways were built to open up new lands; and new industries, including woollen mills, foundries, and paper mills, were introduced.

Liberal reforms

George Grey was Radical prime minister 1877–84, and was largely responsible for the conciliation of the Maori and the introduction of male suffrage. The Conservatives held power 1879–90 and were succeeded by a Liberal government that ruled with trade union support. In 1891 New Zealand took part in the Australasian Federal Convention in Sydney, but rejected idea of joining an Australian Commonwealth. The Liberal government introduced women's suffrage in 1893, the first country in the world to do so. In 1894 there was a financial crisis, when the government came to the aid of the Bank of New Zealand by guaranteeing an issue of new shares up to £2,000,000.

The ensuing years of the Liberal government saw considerable legislative activity in the sphere of fiscal and social reform; thus the Land and Income Tax Act enabled large estates to be compulsorily acquired for settlement, and during 1894–98 a factory act, a shops and offices act, an act for compulsory arbitration in industrial disputes, and an old age pensions act were passed, all liberal measures that represented an important change in the progress of New Zealand towards political maturity, and were forerunners of its social-security legislation of the 20th century.

This liberal programme owed its success partly to the work of John Balance (prime minister 1891–93) and still more to the notable premiership of Richard John Seddon (prime minister 1893–1906). Seddon was in power to the end of his life and maintained the attitude characteristic of the earlier liberal reforms.

Massey and the small farmers

Seddon was not, however, prepared to agree to more socialistic demands from the small farmers. The influence of the small farmers increased with each election, and Seddon's successor, Sir Joseph Ward (Liberal prime minister, 1906–12), had no success with them.

After 1912 the Reform (formerly Conservative) Party regained power. William Massey, premier of the Reform government (1912–25), who had been a working farmer all his life, enjoyed the confidence of the farming community. The development of New Zealand's farming had gathered momentum, and the New Zealand farmers believed themselves to be the real masters of the country. They demanded the right to purchase their freeholds on reasonable terms, and Massey conceded this right. In contrast, Massey made strenuous efforts to control the militant trade unions and the newly formed Federation of Labour, including the violent suppression of the 1912 Waihi miners' strike.

The imperial connection

New Zealand supported Britain in the Boer War of 1899–1902. At the outset Seddon, with the practically unanimous support of the representatives, offered a New Zealand contingent, and some 7,000 officers and men were sent to South Africa. Throughout his 13 years of office Seddon, of all the dominion statesmen, was the strongest supporter of Joseph Chamberlain's imperial dreams of closer union, and at the Colonial Conference (1902) he even suggested that each of the self-governing colonies (as they then were styled) should maintain a body of troops especially for imperial service. In 1907 New Zealand achieved dominion status within the British Empire.

In World War I an expeditionary force of 10,000 men sailed for the Middle East and formed part of the Anzac forces. In all 117,000 men volunteered or were called up for foreign service, and 7,000 for home service.

During the later stages of the war there was labour unrest, and the New Zealand Labour Party was established in 1916. The most important long-term effect of the war in New Zealand was a ripening of national self-consciousness, coupled with a fuller appreciation of the difficulties and responsibilities of Britain.

New Zealand after World War I

Both Massey and Ward took part in the peace conference and duly signed the treaties. New Zealand became a member of the League of Nations and accepted a mandate from the League to administer the former German colony of Western Samoa, giving up a previous desire for outright annexation. After the war the interdependence of Britain's and New Zealand's economies remained New Zealand's major preoccupation, for its previous prosperity had declined and the restoration of pre-1914 prosperity seemed as remote as ever.

The Reform government of Joseph Coates, formed after Massey's death (1925), was not in favour of further borrowing from London, but in 1928 Joseph Ward's United Party (the successor of the Liberal Party from 1927) was returned to office on a platform of land settlement and railroad development to be financed by loans, and £30,000,000 was borrowed in the next few years. By the end of 1933 New Zealand was on the road to recovery, mainly through the expansion of the wool market, but the dairy industry was still at a low ebb.

In 1931 the Statute of Westminster affirmed equality of status between Britain and the dominions, effectively granting independence to New Zealand. In the same year the Reform Party and the United Party entered into a coalition, and merged as the National Party in 1936.

The first Labour government

In 1935 New Zealand elected its first Labour government, under Michael Joseph Savage (prime minister 1935–40), Labour securing 55 members in a house of 80. New Zealand's economic anxieties were further increased in 1935 when the British government decided to tax imported mutton and lamb for the benefit of British producers. In this crisis the country followed the path of economic nationalism.

The Labour government's first important measure of credit policy was to change the Reserve Bank, established in 1934, into a central bank to carry out the monetary policy of the government. By 1938 New Zealand felt that its prosperity had been restored. This was accomplished during an era of socialist administration, when high wages were paid and an ambitious programme of public works set afoot as a system of relief for unemployment, pensions were increased, a big housing programme was begun, and the 44-hour week had been introduced.

But this newly won prosperity rested on an insecure foundation; the country continued to import more than it could pay for. British government credits of £5,000,000 for defence and an export credit of £4,000,000 to finance imports were granted as a result of the mission of Walter Nash, the New Zealand finance minister.

Defence issues and World War II

Conscious of its interests in the Pacific, New Zealand actively supported the construction of the British naval base in Singapore, and Prime Minister Massey had protested when construction was suspended by the British Labour government of 1924. The New Zealand government contributed £1,000,000 when work was resumed.

With a Labour government coming to power in New Zealand in 1935 there was, for the first time, a pronounced difference of views on foreign policy between Britain and New Zealand, but at the Imperial Conference of 1937, however, New Zealand agreed to coordinate its defence policy with Britain's, and as World War II approached the New Zealand government became stronger in its resolve to stand by Britain.

The British declaration of war on Germany was regarded as binding on New Zealand, and when war came New Zealanders stood loyally with Britain. The New Zealand government agreed to send and maintain a force of one division. The New Zealand Division served, with a distinction noted by allies and opponents alike, in Greece, North Africa, and Italy, and New Zealand detachments with the British air force and navy served in the Pacific.

Formal independence, 1947

It was not until the end of 1947 that at long last New Zealand adopted the principal sections (2–6) of the Statute of Westminster and passed a further act asking the British government to legislate to relieve New Zealand of restrictions remaining, under an amending act of 1857, on its powers to amend its own constitution. This request was promptly granted by the passage of the New Zealand Constitution (Amendment) Act, 1949, repealing the New Zealand Constitution (Amendment) Act, 1857, and making it lawful for the parliament of New Zealand ‘to alter, suspend or repeal, at any time, all or any of the provisions of the New Zealand Constitution Act, 1852’. In this way independence was formally accepted by the New Zealand legislature.

Holland's premiership, 1949–57

Michael Joseph Savage had been succeeded as Labour premier in 1940 by Peter Fraser, but after 14 years in office the Labour government was defeated by the National Party, whose leader, Sidney Holland, became prime minister in December 1949.

Holland was soon faced with formidable trouble in the dockers' dispute, which first began in June 1950, and eventually led to a long strike accompanied by serious disturbances. The creation of a new independent waterside workers' union proved a decisive setback to the left, and the prime minister's hard attitude led eventually to the settlement of a protracted coal strike. Holland's policies were endorsed by a majority of the electorate at the general election in September 1951.

Meanwhile the country had taken a full part in the United Nations intervention in the Korean War, 1,500 volunteering for service on the first day and 5,982 registering altogether for the special artillery force that was sent to Korea. An economic crisis in 1952 caused a temporary halt in New Zealand's post-war expansion. The conclusion of the Anzus pact between Australia, New Zealand, and the USA was subject to some criticism in Britain (which was excluded), but was defended by the prime minister as a necessary measure of insurance for the countries concerned. In 1954 New Zealand joined the South East Asia Treaty Organization. Wider in scope than the Anzus pact, it did not, however, replace that pact. The nationalization of the Suez Canal by Egypt in 1956 was condemned by both government and opposition in New Zealand. The government subsequently supported Britain's military intervention in Egypt, though not warned of it in advance. In September 1957 Holland retired from the leadership of the National Party and was succeeded as prime minister by Keith Holyoake, his deputy.

The governments of Nash and Holyoake, 1957–72

At the general election in November 1957 the National Party was defeated and the Labour Party returned to power with the Labour leader Walter Nash as prime minister. Labour remained in power until 1960, and its term of office was marked by further social legislation.

The National Party under Holyoake came back to office in 1960 and remained until 1972. From 1960 to 1963 New Zealand's relations with Britain were dominated by Britain's application to join the European Economic Community (EEC; the precursor of the European Community and the European Union). Many New Zealanders feared that British membership would mean economic ruin for New Zealand, and the rejection of the British application was generally welcomed, but Britain's eventual entry ten years later was accompanied by special arrangements for the marketing of New Zealand butter and cheese designed to safeguard its economy. New Zealand was nevertheless obliged to seek closer trading relations with Australia.

In March 1972 Holyoake retired and was succeeded by his deputy, John Marshall.

Kirk and Rowling's Labour government, 1972–75

In December 1972 the National Party was defeated in a general election, and a Labour government under Norman Kirk was formed. Kirk immediately withdrew the contingent of New Zealand troops that had been fighting in the Vietnam War since 1965.

When Labour took office the economy was thriving mainly because of an international price boom for agricultural products. However this prosperity brought with it the problem of inflation. Increasing domestic demand and the energy crises of 1973–74 led to a rapid rise in imports and a severe balance-of-payments problem, leading in turn to heavy borrowing from abroad to maintain full employment.

The government was more independent in its foreign affairs than its predecessors. It phased out New Zealand's commitments under the South East Asia Treaty Organization and established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China. In 1973 it introduced a visa system, which abolished the automatic right of entry for British people, a further indication of the erosion of political links between the two countries. In 1974 New Zealand protested strongly against French testing of nuclear weapons in the Pacific, and a New Zealand navy frigate escorted international protest vessels into the French test zone.

After Kirk's death in August 1974, Bill Rowling, his finance minister, became prime minister. To counter the growing trade deficit the currency was devalued by 6% in September 1974, and by a further 15% in August 1975. Restrictions were also placed on licensed imports.

Muldoon's National Party government, 1975–84

In November 1975 the government was defeated by the National Party, led by Robert Muldoon, in the general elections. Muldoon took office as prime minister in December. However, the economy failed to revive, despite a succession of large capital projects promoted by the government. In 1984 Muldoon introduced controversial labour legislation and called an early election, but was swept out of office by the Labour Party, led by David Lange.

Non-nuclear policy

The Labour government re-elected in August 1987 (with the same majority as in the previous parliament) had fought the election on a non-nuclear military policy, which Prime Minister Lange immediately put into effect, forbidding any vessels carrying nuclear weapons or powered by nuclear energy from entering New Zealand's ports. This put a strain on relations with the USA, resulting in a suspension of several military-related provisions of the Anzus pact.

In 1985 the trawler Rainbow Warrior, the flagship of the environmentalist pressure group Greenpeace, which was monitoring nuclear tests in French Polynesia, was mined in Auckland harbour by French secret service agents, killing a Portuguese photographer aboard. The French prime minister eventually admitted responsibility, and New Zealand demanded compensation.

In July 1987 the National Party gave its support to the government in a bipartisan non-nuclear policy, and as a result the USA reclassified New Zealand as a ‘friendly’, rather than an ‘allied’, country.

In August 1989 Lange resigned, citing health reasons, and was replaced by Geoffrey Palmer. In September 1990, faced with a no-confidence vote, Prime Minister Palmer resigned and was replaced by a former Labour foreign-affairs minister, Mike Moore.

New Zealand in the 1990s

In the October 1990 general election the ruling Labour Party was defeated and the National Party leader, Jim Bolger, became the new prime minister. In November 1991 former premier Robert Muldoon criticized Bolger's right-wing social policies.

New Zealand's traditional two-party party political system was challenged in December 1991 by the formation of the Alliance Party, comprising the Democratic Party, the New Labour Party (NLP), the Green Party, and the (mainly Maori) New Zealand Self-Government Party.

In July 1992 the ban imposed on visits by US warships was lifted, and in September a referendum approved a change in the voting system, to make it semiproportional, with effect from 1996. The National Party won the 1993 general election with a majority of one seat. Simultaneously, a second referendum reaffirmed the electorate's preference for a semiproportional voting system. In September 1994 the National Party temporarily lost its one-seat majority after a junior minister resigned to form the Right of Centre Party (ROC). However, Prime Minister Bolger remained in power by entering into alliance with the new party.

The New Zealand government objected strongly to France's decision to resume nuclear testing in the Pacific region in 1995. In February 1996 the National Party signed a formal coalition agreement with the United Party, giving the government a parliamentary majority of one. In September a general election produced an inconclusive result. In December 1996 a coalition government was formed, with Jim Bolger as prime minister and the leader of the New Zealand First Party (NZFP), Winston Peters, as his deputy. After losing the support of a majority of his MPs, Bolger retired in December 1997 and was succeeded by the former Transport Minister, Jenny Shipley, New Zealand's first woman prime minister.

In August 1998 a rift between Shipley and her deputy Winston Peters, of the New Zealand First party, led to calls for an early general election, as the NZFP withdrew from the coalition. The election was held in November 1999, and resulted in the replacement of Shipley's conservative government by a centre-left coalition of the Labour Party and New Zealand Alliance, led by Helen Clark (Labour). The leader of the Alliance party, Jim Anderton, became deputy prime minister. The new government won a minority of seats in the election, and consequently was dependent on the support of the Green Party. The government pledged to address the widening gap that had emerged during the 1990s between the rich and the poor of the country, using strategies that included raising the top rates of personal income tax and assisting poor families, many of whom were Maoris. Clark also announced her support in September 2000 for a merger of the Australian and New Zealand stock exchange, and for a common currency between the countries.

In August 2000, Dame Silvia Cartwright was named as next governor-general. Her appointment in April 2001 meant that all top political offices in New Zealand were held by women.

In March 2001, Clark announced cuts to the country's military forces, disbanding the combat section of the air force, and scaling back the navy. The announcement angered Australia and the USA, who questioned New Zealand's commitment to regional security. A further defence review in May concluded that New Zealand was not directly threatened by any country, and recommended the disbanding of its air-combat division.

In April 2002 the government announced that a Supreme Court sitting in Wellington would replace Britain's Privy Council as the country's final court of appeal. The Privy Council had been the court of appeal for 151 years, but was replaced after fears that the cost of taking an appeal to London, England, was beyond the reach of most members of the public.

In July the Labour Party retained power in general elections, although it failed to gain an absolute parliamentary majority. In the election, called four months early, Labour won 52 of the 120 seats (up from 49 in 1999) and National Party took 27 (its worst-ever result).

Demographic trends

It was estimated in 1999 that, by the middle of the 21st century, half the children born in New Zealand would be Maori or Pacific Islanders.



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