It was simply called 'The Tour'. For 56 taut days in the winter of 1981, New Zealanders were divided against each other in the largest civil disturbance seen since the 1951 waterfront dispute. more...
Learn about opposition to French nuclear testing on remote Pacific atolls, nuclear-free legislation and the 1985 sinking of the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior. more...
A bitter public and political debate swept the country during the homosexual law reform campaign of the mid-1980s. more...
The waterfront dispute of 1951 was the biggest industrial confrontation in New Zealand’s history. more...
Labour Day is no ordinary holiday. It celebrates the struggle for an eight-hour working day, a right that New Zealand workers had been among the first in the world to claim. more...
Legislating for the prohibition of alcohol was one of the major social issues of late-19th and early-20th century more...
An organised move by the hotels around Greymouth to raise the price of beer in 1947 led to one of the most effective consumer boycotts ever seen in New Zealand. more...
They called it 'Black Tuesday'. On 12 November 1912, in the goldmining town of Waihi, striker Fred Evans died during a violent confrontation. more...
The year 1933 witnessed an unprecedented eruption of protest amongst urban businessmen and professionals in New Zealand. The most prominent manifestation of this protest was a radical conservative movement named the New Zealand Legion. more...