Hi
Friend,
A
few weeks ago, we emailed about
some of the ridiculous funding that is being handed out by the Royal
Society of New Zealand through the "Marsden Fund" – which is
supposed to be for the crème de la crème of New Zealand
academia, showcasing the highest standards of scholarly excellence and
innovation.
As a reminder, according to the Society's website the
Fund "Supports excellence in science, engineering, maths,
social sciences and the humanities in New Zealand by providing grants
for investigator-initiated research" and
gave out $83.5 million of taxpayer money last year
alone.
Like last time, you be the judge of these latest projects our
team have uncovered...
Researching the "Big Things"
Ever seen those roadside sculptures, , and thought "someone
should really study those"? You'll be delighted to learn
that $360,000 has been spent to do that very road trip, I mean research! 🗿🗿🗿🚐
Grant ID:
22-VUW-021
Recipient: Dr M Zonjic, Victoria University of
Wellington
Big Things, Complex Shadows:
investigating intersecting stories of place, identity, and erasure
through large roadside sculptures in
Aotearoa
"During the 1980s economic recession, struggling
small towns across Aotearoa started building large roadside sculptures
– or "Big Things" – to sell unique provincial identities and attract
passing motorists. Currently, more than two dozen "Big Things" are
peppered across the country's landscape, contributing to the
production, performance, and tourism marketing of particular places
and identities. But whose stories do these novelty structures tell?
And which narratives are obscured by their literal and proverbial
shadows?
This
project brings a critical gaze to the privileging of Pākehā-centred
narratives in current research on roadside "Big
Things".
Adopting a transformative epistemology, it
attends to the ways in which "Big Things" can be an apparatus of
forgetting settler-colonial histories, to provoke a new way of
thinking about hegemonic constructions of colonial objects and the way
these obscure land dispossession.
Weaving together feminist, participatory, and filmic
geographies, this project seeks to re-centre alternative stories
currently hidden in the Big Things’ shadows, culminating in a
scholarly monograph and six short films - one from each
field-site.
Internationally, this research provides a
timely Antipodean contribution to contemporary scholarship examining
the complex negotiations of decolonising public spaces, and the role
that statues, however innocuous they may seem, occupy within
them."
Approved funding:
$360,000
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"Big things" indeed! 👀
Climate change is big thing. As is its impact on oceans.
This creative academic, Dr BJ Etherington, has heroically
managed to shoehorn disability studies and poetry to feast at the
climate change trough research pool! See if you can make sense
of this one:
Grant ID:
23-VUW-025
Recipient: Dr BJ Etherington, Victoria
University of Wellington
Literatures of Environment and
Disability from Oceania
"A diverse range of environmental
impacts is hitting Oceania in this current moment of climate change,
and disabled people, especially disabled Indigenous people, are
increasingly at risk from those impacts. Yet the stories these people
tell are often overlooked by literary researchers.
It is imperative to highlight
disabled people’s stories from Oceania as those who live here face
progressively volatile environmental
situations. These literatures emerge from
contexts where military and extractive contamination often cause
disabilities, and where disabled people are considered collateral
damage during disasters, including the Covid-19 pandemic.
My project analyses novels, short stories, creative
nonfiction, and poems from Aotearoa, Guåhan, Hawai‘i, Sāmoa, West
Papua, Papua New Guinea, and Fiji, establishing how such stories
resist ableist narratives and theorise and advance disability-centred
ways of creating sustainable and just environmental
futures.
This project argues that we cannot
emphasise climate justice and account for those living in precarious
environmental conditions without also prioritising the stories of
disabled peoples. These literatures offer strategies for caring for
one another and our environments as we all, abled and disabled,
grapple with diverse ecological conditions once considered
deviant.
Approved funding:
$360,000
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Frankly, I'm astonished there is more than a handful of poems
and stories about disabled pacific people taking on climate change.
But then again, if I was given 360 grand, I'd travel through the
Oceania hotspots to go looking! 🛫🏖️👋
How often do you see the words "alcohol", "dark sludge" and
"Māori methodologies" together? This one
feels like Massey University has been making use of its random word
generator again.
Grant ID:
23-MAU-022
Recipient: Associate Professor T Huckle, Massey
University
Dark nudges and sludge: big
alcohol and dark advertising on social
media
We will 1) explore alcohol
industry dark nudging and sludge [using cognitive biases to make
psychological resistance more difficult] on social media; 2)
investigate the experiences of dark nudging and sludge among
rangatahi/young people; 3) build theory around these practices to
advance knowledge within a rapidly developing digital world.
We will explore the experiences of
dark nudging and sludge among rangatahi Māori and Tangata Tiriti aged
16-24 years using an approach grounded in young people’s online worlds
and real-time experiences. We will
draw on Māori methodologies and approaches.
Our research will produce
ground-breaking knowledge and establish Aotearoa, New Zealand at the
forefront of this new research area.
We will also be the first to extend
public health and social science theory into the “darkness” of current
alcohol-industry exploitive tactics and transform global debate on
unhealthy industry practices that restrict individual autonomy for
informed choice in an unregulated digital
environment."
Approved funding:
$861,000
|
An alternative name for this $861,000 research could be "Breaking
News: Advertising encourages people to buy stuff".
Speaking of $861k, how about this grant look at a couple of
fisheries across the world and what they tell us about "imperial"
borders and governance of the ocean. Really?
🎣
Grant ID:
23-UOW-057
Recipient: Dr FE McCormack, University of
Waikato
Marine inequality and environmental
demise: Identifying imperial borders in ocean
governance
"By foregrounding the role of ‘border
imperialism’ in institutionalising marine exclusions, the research
draws critical attention to the relationship between environmental
decline, social inequality, and the longue durée of imperialist
ideologies in ocean governance.
The project’s field sites are four island nation states:
Aotearoa, Hawaii, Iceland and Ireland, each of which has a
distinct marine culture as well as historically diverse fishing
economies and livelihoods. Each too has a different history of
colonialism alongside a rich legacy of anti-colonial resistances and
other forms of social movements, broadly rooted in claims to the
commons.
This research proposes that these
oft-contentious histories are uniquely patterned in their ocean
economies and regulatory regimes. Employing a comparative ethnographic
approach to investigate four case studies—marine aquaculture in
Aotearoa, the wild, angler and farmed salmon fisheries in Iceland and
Ireland, and the aquarium fishery in Hawaii—the research will generate
fundamental knowledge to support ongoing imperatives to decolonise
ocean worlds."
Approved funding:
$861,000
|
Who knew "ocean worlds" (i.e fish) are racist colonisers? 😮
Note too the reference to "field sites". That's code for Ireland,
Iceland, Hawaii round the world business class travel – sorry,
research.
Now we move on to end-of-life experiences, and asking that age old
question of whether end of life experiences are determined by
astrology?
In the world of our crème de la
crème research grants, death is indeed linked to the
stars! ✨
And thank goodness too that some of this 'science' money is going
to be used to "make a documentary" (a whole new take to high school
science, no doubt). 🤯
Grant ID:
23-MAU-090
Recipient: Associate Professor NA
Tassell-Matamua, Massey University
Kua whetūrangihia koe. Linking the
celestial spheres to end-of-life experiences.
"What compelled Māori to link the celestial
sphere with death, and what continues to inspire narratives, rituals
and practices that reinforce this link?
This first of its kind to explore this
question, this study will gather accounts of death-related phenomena
via an online tool and use interviews to further explore how Māori
make meaning from these experiences and link them to the celestial
sphere.
Innovatively mapping death-related
experiences onto the annual movement of Matariki over time, we will
examine whether linkages exist between the timing and features of such
experiences and Kōkōrangi Māori (Māori astronomy), and share our
findings via a short documentary.
In doing so, we will create opportunities to rekindle the ancient
connection to the stars and re-imagine the meaning of death, while
also advancing understandings about the practical application of Māori
astronomy in contemporary times."
Approved funding:
$861,000
|
These five grants alone amount to $3.3million. And with $83.5
million in annual taxpayer funding each year just for Marsden, this
trough is large.
The media aren't doing their job. This nonsense needs to be
exposed.
Friend, I wish we were making up these research grants! It's
exposing the wasteful spending which the media aren't that is the
reason David and I founded the Taxpayers' Union. Who
else will hold these taxpayer funded quangos and academics to
account?
Sunlight is the best
disinfectant, and the only thing that will prompt MPs
and Ministers to take on the vested interests and return science
funding to, well, science.
Few would resent paying taxes for genuine scientific
research. But every week we're uncovering more nonsense at
Marsden/the Royal Society, the Health Research Council, and our
universities.
This work is only made possible by
the New Zealanders who chip-in and allow us to keep the lights on (and
keep digging to expose wasteful
spending). To
make a confidential, secure donation, click here.
Thank you for your support.
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Jordan
Williams Executive Director New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union
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