Are we all Hobbits now?

‘The Hobbit Enabling Act’ – the title alone should keep postmodern theorists in scholarly manuscripts for at least the next decade. Apparently, we’re all now enabled to be Hobbits – but is that what we want to be?

Alternatively, if the dust has truly settled on The Hobbit films saga perhaps it no longer matters. As an immense surprise to all concerned, the films will be filmed in New Zealand. An unclear clarification of the Employment Relations Act and $30m+ later, Warner Brothers don’t mind if they do, thanks very much.

Yet, so far as I’m aware*, no-one has highlighted the aspect of this saga that is present in all its surreal glory in the title of that Act. I mean New Zealand’s national identity or, simply, what we value most. Continue reading

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Freedom of dissociation

Almost lost in the usual shifting focus of the media has been the progress of the Education (Freedom of Association) Amendment Bill.

Recent discussion on Radio New Zealand revolved around the question of whether or not the existing right of students to form Students Associations over-rides the ability of individual students to choose with whom to associate (financially and structurally).

The relevant clauses in the Bill are the replacement Section 229:

New section 229 substituted

Section 229 is repealed and the following section substituted:

229     Voluntary membership of students associations

“(1)     No person, including any tertiary institution or any association of students, may require any student or exert undue influence on any student

“(a)      to become or not become a member of any association of students; or

“(b)      to pay any money to any association of students, or to any other person in lieu of such fees.

“(2)    No person, including any tertiary institution, may act in any way which conflicts with the sprit and intent of this section.”

It seems straightforwardly a matter of individual rights (and liberty). Why should students have to join an association and pay fees to it if they don’t want to? Continue reading

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Who we didn’t vote for

The Christchurch City Council local body elections showed, beneath the bare figures of the election returns, some interesting patterns. (Figures for number of enrolled voters per ward can be accessed here.)

There are seven wards in Christchurch City: Banks Peninsula; Fendalton/Waimairi; Hagley/Ferrymead; Shirley/Papanui; Spreydon/Heathcote; Burwood/Pegasus; Riccarton/Wigram.

The table linked to below shows the tendency of voters in each ward (a) to vote; (b) to vote for councillors; and, (c) to vote for community board members.

There are a few interesting points to note from the table: Continue reading

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‘Mother of harlots and earth’s abominations’

Saturday Morning on Radio New Zealand National featured Doug Saunders – journalist and author – talking about his book ‘Arrival Cities: How the largest Migration in History is Reshaping Our World‘. You can go here for the link to the audio if you missed it.

The idea seems simple: The world is now going through the urban transition which developed countries went through during industrialisation. Over 50% of the earth’s population is now urbanised and by centuries end that could be 75%. The world’s ghettos, shantytowns and city slums are, in his words, ‘arrival cities’, an unexpected type of transition town, if you like.

These ‘arrival cities’ are populated by aspirational rural people who actively and freely choose the slum life because it represents better conditions including greater longevity, lower poverty, less risk of starvation and cable tv(!).

Sounds good, even upbeat. What looks like a terrible problem is actually a, perhaps painful, step on the road to good times. So, what’s the problem? Continue reading

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Publish – and be Damned

I may as well begin how I intend to go on.

Why should anyone blog? After all, even the most innocuous posts can attract vitriol and ridicule. (Worse still, for the paranoid there’s the question of what those readers who don’t comment are thinking!). Why take the risk of what social psychologists call the “social evaluative threat“?

I’m based in New Zealand. That means this blog will often discuss New Zealand politics (that’s what I see around me). But my aim is always to “see a world in a grain of sand” so with any luck there’ll be something of interest for anyone reading my posts. I want to understand political issues by connecting them to what we might think we know about people and the world (i.e., ‘science’). I’ll also blog directly about that (what we think we know).

More generally, this blog will be about politics, science and how they come together in everyday life. What do I mean?

Well, as I’ve already done, take the example of blogging. The answer to the question of why people blog links these three domains. It’s about science – blogging is a behaviour, a social phenomenon and is part of an economic, technological and technical system. There are ‘sciences’ associated with each of these aspects of blogging. (e.g., why write something on the internet and open yourself up to potential ridicule and embarrassment? What’s the psychology, the sociology, the economics, even the physiology of that?

Blogging is political – obviously in a political blog, but that’s not solely what I mean.

It’s happening in a particular economic and political environment – it wouldn’t happen (and wouldn’t have to happen) in other economic and political environments. It expresses and asserts values held by individuals and groups and politics is, amongst other things, the contest over values. Blogging, as with just about everything we do, is political – at least in consequences if not also in intent.

And, blogging is part of everyday life, at least for some. It’s intruded itself into daily experience, into discussions, into media. Bloggers appear in the traditional media. Blogging starts news stories, fashions and urban myths that affect many more people than those who write and read blogs.

I’ll end with a simple question: Is blogging a ‘good’ thing?

As soon as you try to answer that question seriously you’ll find yourself talking about science, politics and everyday life.

You’ll find yourself, I hope, wanting to come back here.

P.S. I’m building this site but will commit to posts first – that’s the point of a blog.

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