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Polynesian Panthers records the Pacific rights and social activist
movement in New Zealand, told by those who were there. Forming in
1971, the Polynesian Panthers sought to raise consciousness and
took action in response to the racism and discrimination Pacific
peoples faced in New Zealand in the 1970s and 1980s. The Panthers
organised prison visit programmes and sporting and debating teams
for inmates; provided a halfway-house service for young men
released from prison; ran homework centres; and offered `people's
loans', legal aid and food banks that catered for 600 families at
their height. Drawing on interviews, memoirs, poetry, newspaper
articles and critical analysis, Polynesian Panthers is a
thought-provoking account of this period in New Zealand.
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