Ngahuia Te Awekotuku
Gay Liberation movement members remember 50 years since first meeting
The Rainbow community is full of pride this month.
April marks half-a-century since our very first 'Gay Day' in Auckland.
It all started with a student forum in 1972.
On Monday pioneering queer… Audio
The unwritten history of LGBTQ+ life in New Zealand should be remembered and celebrated, say long-time activists
Thomas Sainsbury talks with Louisa Wall MP, Prof. Welby Ings, Professor Emeritus Ngahuia Te Awekotuku, and award winning artist and filmmaker Tanu Gago. Audio
BANG! Season 2 Episode 6: Takatāpui
Scholars and activists Ngahuia Te Awekotuku and Elizabeth Kerekere speak with Melody Thomas about what sex, sexuality and gender looked like in Te Ao Maori prior to colonisation, plus Rosanna Raymond… Audio
Mana Ngangahu: Female Warrior
Ngāhuia Te Awekōtuku has been a catalyst for the gay liberation movement in Aotearoa for nearly five decades. Audio
Singing for Natasha
Any week on a Tuesday night at an Auckland marae you'll hear members of the kapa haka group Ahakoa te Aha singing for their dead sister Natasha Allen Hohepa. Audio
Goldie's paintings - are they art or ancestors?
Descendents of a tohunga immortalised in paint by CF Goldie are dismayed their ancestor may be headed offshore, and there seems to be little they can do to stop it. Audio
Challenges persist for queer community
Alex Ashton considers if same-sex marriage has changed what it is to be gay, lesbian, bisexual or trans in NZ Audio
Playing Favourites with Ngahuia Te Awekotuku
Professor of Research and Development at Te Puawananga ki te Ao, University of Waikato, and an authority on moko. With Rosslyn Noonan she has curated Tirohia Mai Look At Us Now at the National… Audio
Feature Guest - Dr Ngahuia Te Awekotuku
Dr Ngahuia Te Awekotuku of Waikato University's centre for Maori and Pacific Development Research is one of the country's leading authority on moko. Audio
Maori Heritage Arts
Dr Ngahuia Te Awekotuku discusses why levels of participation in Maori heritage arts are to be studied around the country. Audio
He Rourou for 17 September 2008
Ana Tapiata talks to Dr Ngahuia Te Awekotuku and Ria Hall from the Maori board of Creative NZ, Te Waka Toi. Audio