He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme
0 sources
He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme
Summary
He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme is a master's thesis[1].
Key Facts
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme authored transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — author (P50): Ian Challenger[2].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's instance of is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — instance of (P31): master's thesis[3].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's publisher is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — publisher (P123): Research@Lincoln[4].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's country of origin is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — country of origin (P495): New Zealand[5].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's publication date is recorded as +2013-00-00T00:00:00Z[6].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's main subject is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — main subject (P921): indigenous development[7].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's main subject is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — main subject (P921): Māori sociological studies[8].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's main subject is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — main subject (P921): Māori culture[9].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's main subject is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — main subject (P921): sustainable development[10].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's work available at URL is recorded as https://researcharchive.lincoln.ac.nz/handle/10182/5726[11].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's Handle ID is recorded as 10182/5726[12].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's title is recorded as He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme[13].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's copyright holder is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — copyright holder (P3931): Ian Challenger[14].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's thesis submitted to is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — thesis submitted to (P4101): Lincoln University[15].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — on focus list of Wikimedia project (P5008): NZThesisProject[16].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's copyright status is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — copyright status (P6216): copyrighted[17].
- He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's thesis committee member is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — thesis committee member (P9161): Simon Lambert[18].
Body
Designation and Status
He Poutama Maori: transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme's instance of is recorded as transferring indigenous philosophy to a sustainability programme — instance of (P31): master's thesis[3].