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Annual Report 2011 Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand 3240 http://www.waikato.ac.nz/nidea Phone: +64 7 8384040 Fax: +64 7 8384621 Email: [email protected]

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  • Annual Report 2011

    Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand 3240

    http://www.waikato.ac.nz/nidea

    Phone: +64 7 8384040 Fax: +64 7 8384621 Email: [email protected]

    http://www.waikato.ac.nz/nidea

  • Annual Report 2011

  • 1

    Table of Contents

    Welcome from the Director .................................................................................................................... 3

    Background to NIDEA .............................................................................................................................. 4

    Major Achievements ............................................................................................................................... 4

    Awards .................................................................................................................................................... 6

    International Collaborations ................................................................................................................... 7

    Professional Advisory Roles .................................................................................................................... 8

    Editorial Roles ......................................................................................................................................... 8

    NIDEA Research Advisory Group Leader ................................................................................................. 9

    Reports from Theme Leaders ............................................................................................................... 10

    Externally Funded Research .................................................................................................................. 15

    Postgraduate Supervision ..................................................................................................................... 17

    Postgraduate Completions ................................................................................................................... 18

    Masters Supervision .............................................................................................................................. 18

    Seminars ................................................................................................................................................ 19

    Visitors .................................................................................................................................................. 20

    Summer Scholars .................................................................................................................................. 21

    Major International Conference Contributions .................................................................................... 22

    Invited Keynote and Plenary Presentations - International .......................................................... 22

    Other International Presentations ................................................................................................ 22

    Major National Conference Contributions ........................................................................................... 24

    Invited Keynote and Plenary Presentations – National ................................................................ 24

    Other Invited Presentations / Workshops .................................................................................... 24

    Other Presentations ...................................................................................................................... 26

    Publications/Outputs ............................................................................................................................ 28

    Articles in refereed journals .......................................................................................................... 28

    Non-refereed journal articles........................................................................................................ 28

    Chapters in books.......................................................................................................................... 29

    Essays ............................................................................................................................................ 29

    Technical Reports .......................................................................................................................... 29

    Papers in published conference proceedings ............................................................................... 29

    Commissioned Research Reports ................................................................................................. 30

    Discussion and Working Papers .................................................................................................... 31

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    Other Public and Community Engagement .................................................................................. 32

    Media Interviews/Citations........................................................................................................... 33

    NIDEA Directorate - Staff ...................................................................................................................... 36

    NIDEA Members .................................................................................................................................... 37

    NIDEA Research Associates ................................................................................................................... 37

  • 3

    Welcome from the Director

    It is my pleasure to present the 2011 NIDEA Annual Report. Having launched NIDEA in November 2010, the Directorate staff began the National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis’s establishment phase in 2011 with considerable enthusiasm and energy. Alongside work on a broad range of existing projects, the team focussed on developing NIDEA’s organisational structure and resources, building its research capacity, and promoting its teaching and research expertise.

    New positions were created and others restructured, including expanding the number of Research Assistants and Research Associates to provide a wider research and advisory capacity. A steady stream of visitors also helped to build new research networks and collaborations, as did the building of research teams to apply for outside external grants. The NIDEA Seminar Series and NIDEA Working Paper Series were initiated, and provided a showcase for in-house research and overseas visitors.

    New students were welcomed into the discipline of demography at every level of teaching, and a number of courses were adapted to accommodate the interests of the expanding number of post-graduate students. At the teaching/research interface, NIDEA welcomed and supervised a total of eight Summer Research Scholars over the 2010-2011 and 2011-2012 summer breaks, with each student undertaking a research topic aligned with one of NIDEA's five themes. NIDEA also provided in-the-field experience for two international students undertaking postgraduate overseas degrees.

    It was a busy year, for despite the rigours of being in an establishment phase staff members delivered an impressive collection of published papers/books/chapters and presentations, and gave a significant number of media interviews and seminars. Presentations given to a wide spectrum of stakeholders in university research resulted in a significant interest in NIDEA's demographic and economic research capacity and an increasing number of requests for NIDEA's expertise from local health providers, city and regional councils, as well as requests from other research institutes to collaborate on projects. Similarly, participation in international conferences has led to invitations to future conferences and collaboration in research programmes.

    In the next few years, we look forward to building on the dedicated work of staff during the 2011 establishment phase.

  • 4

    Background to NIDEA

    The National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis (NIDEA) was launched on November 24th 2010; its mission, to undertake research that will help inform choices and responses to the demographic, social and economic forces that are shaping New Zealand's future. Initially an informal collaboration of researchers at the University of Waikato’s Population Studies Centre, Waikato Management School, and Wellington-based Motu Economic and Public Policy

    Research Trust, NIDEA now links together a virtual community of leading national and international researchers working at the interface of demography and economics. NIDEA research supports and guides decision-making in a broad range of areas such as the labour market, healthcare, local government planning, housing and education, welfare, business enterprise and the market generally. NIDEA also contributes to the building of research

    capacity in the field through its undergraduate teaching, supervision of graduate and postgraduate students, and workshops.

    Hosted by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) NIDEA’s establishment is being guided by a four-member Interim Management Committee comprising NIDEA Director Professor Natalie Jackson, Motu Director Howard Fancy, Professor Dan Zirker (then Dean FASS) and Professor Frank Scrimgeour, Dean WMS. Professor Zirker was replaced by Acting Dean Dr David Lumsden in November.

    Major Achievements

    This year we highlight the emergence of a new generation of demographers

    Since launching in November 2010, NIDEA has become home to a cohort of talented and award-winning demographers-in-training who are working across a broad range of population research topics. Building demographic capability and providing meaningful research opportunities for students to work alongside senior researchers is a key part of the NIDEA vision, and we are delighted to highlight these successes as evidence of the value of research-led teaching.

    Moana Rarere entered NIDEA’s Masters programme in 2011 after obtaining First Class Honours in Social Policy. During the year Moana worked on several projects with Dr Tahu Kukutai, including an action research project in the Hokianga and a study of Māori transnationalism using Census data from four countries. Moana has been awarded a number of scholarships from the University of Waikato (Māori excellence postgraduate award; University of Waikato Masters research scholarship; Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Masters thesis award), as well as awards from the Waikato Graduate Women Charitable Trust and Whakatane Historical Society.

    One of NIDEA’s first summer scholars (2010-2011) and now the Institute’s first graduate with a major in Population Studies, Rachael Hutt joined NIDEA as a Research Assistant in February. During 2011 Rachael was also completing her undergraduate degree and in the process amassed an impressive list of awards, including Golden Key's Asia-Pacific Outstanding Academic Achievement Award, the Katherine M. Bell memorial prize for the University of Waikato’s top Geography student,

  • 5

    and the 2011 PANZ Jacoby prize for her paper ‘New Zealand’s sole parents and their marital status: Updating the last decade’, supervised by Professor Jackson.

    Another star graduate to have taken papers in population studies since NIDEA’s inception, Maraea Mullane-Ronaki worked for Dr Kukutai and Professor Jackson on a summer scholarship project (2011-2012) ‘Finding the demographic dividend for Māori’. Maraea’s excellent studies saw her complete 2011 with a University of Waikato Māori postgraduate excellence award.

    Jaimee Phillips undertook a Directed Study in NIDEA under Professor Poot’s supervision. Jaimee researched differences in returns to foreign and domestic education in New Zealand. She was also a 2010-2011 Student Summer scholar. Her research was funded by the Integration of Immigrants Programme. She started out her work as Jaimee Frew, but perhaps influenced by the exposure to demographic processes at NIDEA, got married and finished as Jaimee Phillips. A poster from her paper won the 2011 NZIER Student Poster Competition at the 52nd Annual Conference of the NZ Association of Economists, Amora Hotel, Wellington, 29 June - 1 July. Jaimee now works as a management trainee at the Head Office of the Bank of New Zealand in Auckland. PhD student Steven Bond-Smith, who is supervised by Professor Jacques Poot, Philip McCann and Les Oxley, won the Student Presentation Award at the 22nd Pacific Regional Science Conference held in Seoul, Korea, 3-6 July for his paper ‘A regional model of growth with creative destruction’.

    Finally, we recently learned that undergraduate Jackson Mason-Mackay was awarded the 2011 Borrie prize for the best undergraduate essay for his submission, ‘Gaining from the brain drain: Why the emigration of skilled workers may be aiding development’. Sponsored by the Australian Population Association, the annual Borrie prize promotes excellence in population-relevant research across all academic disciplines. Over the 2011-2012 Summer, Jackson worked with Professor Jackson on a project to produce socio-demographic profiles for several Territorial Authorities.

  • 6

    Awards

    In September, Natalie Jackson, along with Richard Arnold (VUW), Sharleen Forbes (University of Victoria and Statistics New Zealand), Alan Lee (University of Auckland), John Harraway (University of Otago), Andrew Sporle (University of Auckland), and Jenny Brown / Greg Breetzke (University of Canterbury), were awarded the International Statistical Literacy Project's ‘Best Cooperative Project Award’ in Statistical Literacy for ‘A post-graduate programme in official statistics’. The cross-institutional and cross-disciplinary course was taught via the KAREN network, and was an initiative of Statistics New Zealand and NAOS (the Network of Academics in Official Statistics). See http://msor.victoria.ac.nz/Courses/ORST482_2011T2/WebHome

    The award is given once every two years in recognition of outstanding, innovative, and influential statistical literacy projects that affect a broad segment of the general public and are fruit of the cooperation of different types of institutions (national statistical offices, schools, statistical societies, media, libraries etc.). It was won jointly with an Ethiopian initiative ‘North-South-South (NSS) International Collaborative Project in Biostatistics’.

    http://msor.victoria.ac.nz/Courses/ORST482_2011T2/WebHome

  • 7

    International Collaborations

    Emeritus Professor Ian Pool is Co-Editor-in-Chief, with Prof Yves Charbit, Centre de Population et Developpement, University of Paris, Descartes, of a book series being published by Springer, “Demographic Transformation and Socio-Economic Development”. The first books, being edited at present, should appear in 2012. During 2011, Professor Jacques Poot continued his research on the project Migrant Diversity and Regional Disparity in Europe (MIDI-REDIE), which is funded by the European funding agency Norface. This research necessitated three trips to Europe, where he was primarily based at VU University in Amsterdam. He also continued his relationship with IZA - Institute for the Study of Labor in Bonn and with the Centre of Research and Analysis of Migration (CReAM) at University College London. In August, Professor Jacques Poot also visited Purdue University. Jacques is an External Faculty Member in the Graduate School of Agricultural Economics. Besides giving a seminar at Purdue University, he also participated in the final oral defence of his PhD student Julia Beckhusen.

    Professor Richard Bedford was engaged in two major international collaborations during 2011. The first was with Professor Graeme Hugo from the University of Adelaide on Pacific Migration futures. They completed a major report commissioned by the Department of Labour (NZ) and the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (Australia) entitled Population Movement in the Pacific: A Perspective on Future Prospects. This report was presented to a joint meeting of senior New Zealand and Australian immigration officials in September 2011 at the Australia New Zealand Immigration Forum, and then at separate meetings of immigration officials in Canberra (late November) and in Wellington (December). The report was published on the Department of Labour’s website early in 2012.

    The second collaboration was with Professor Brian Opeskin from Macquarie University’s Law School and has led to a contribution for a book on International Migration Law to be published by Cambridge University Press. The book involves 16 international collaborators, mainly from Europe, North America and Australasia, and the draft chapters for the book were presented at a workshop co-ordinated by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Geneva in May 2011. The book is currently in press and will appear in the second half of 2012.

  • 8

    Professional Advisory Roles

    Like many of his NIDEA colleagues, Jacques Poot had several advisory roles during the year. He was a Member of the Labour and Immigration Research Centre Advisory Group at the Department of Labour. He was also a member of the National Advisory Group on the Development and Use of Spatial Planning Tools; a member of the Scientific Committee of European Regional Science Association (ERSA) Conference in Barcelona (30 August – 2 September) and a Programme Committee Member of the 2011 MAER-Net Colloquium on International Development at Wolfson College, Cambridge University (17-18 September). He also assessed grant applications for the European research Council and for the Vienna Science and Technology Fund.

    Professor Peggy Koopman-Boyden chairs the AgeWISE advisory committee to the Waikato District Health Board, contributing to the incorporation of research on ageing into the planning of health policy. She is also a member of the Council of Elders, advising the Hamilton City Council on policy matters, especially in relation to ageing, and a member of Age Concern (New Zealand) Research Advisory Committee.

    Editorial Roles

    In 2011, Professor Natalie Jackson reviewed articles for New Zealand Sociology; Population Research and Policy Review; International Migration; and Geographical Research. Dr Yaghoob (Yaqub) Foroutan served as referee for a large number of international peer-reviewed journals including Journal of Population Research, Journal of Sociology, Ethnic and Racial Studies, International Migration, Review of Religious Research, International Migration Review, Sociological Inquiry. Emeritus Professor Ian Pool is a member of the editorial board of Canadian Population Studies and also reviews manuscripts for the journal. He also reviews manuscripts for Population Research and Policy Review.

    Professor Jacques Poot continued with editorial board positions for Kōtuitui − New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences; International Journal of Population Research; Australian Journal of Labour

  • 9

    Economics; Studies in Regional Science; Papers in Regional Science; and Australasian Journal of Regional Studies. Jacques also edited a special issue of Annals in Regional Science and Studies in Regional Science; and took up the invited position of Section Editor of the multi-volume Handbook of Regional Science, which will be published in 2013. He is responsible for the part of the Handbook entitled "Regional economic growth", which will consist of 10 chapters. Besides his work as editor he also acted as a referee of 14 journal submissions for the journals: Annals of Regional Science, Australasian Journal of Regional Studies, British Journal of Sociology, Industrial Relations, International Journal of Population Research, Journal of Economic Surveys, Journal of Population Economics, Journal of Regional Science, Letters in Spatial and Resource Sciences, Papers in Regional Science, Studies in Regional Science.

    Professor Richard Bedford continued with editorial board positions on Asia Pacific Viewpoint, Geographical Research, Population, Place and Society, Journal of Population Research and is one of three Advisory Editors for the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. Dr Tahu Kukutai joined Kōtuitui − New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences as an Associate Editor and continues her role as Associate Editor, Australia-Asia region of the International Indigenous Policy Journal.

    NIDEA Research Advisory Group Leader

    Keeping a watching brief on NIDEA’s research activities is Emeritus Professor Ian Pool, NIDEA’s Research Advisory Coordinator. Professor Pool’s long and distinguished career and many national and international collaborations at the interface of demographic, economic and policy issues allow NIDEA a global connection to relevant and emerging research being undertaken around the world.

    Professor Pool is presently writing a new book on Maori population and development 1769-2010, focusing on the impacts of resource alienation on Maori people.

  • 10

    Reports from Theme Leaders

    NIDEA’s research programme comprises five interconnected themes and is supported and sustained by a strong capacity-building programme - the NIDEA Demographic Laboratory. The programme addresses the most central questions of population studies – demographic transitions, population ageing, population distribution, migration, and ethnic and cultural diversity, and links them to economic, political and social transformations, such as the ageing of the labour force and regional development, to help inform policy-makers and planners at local and national level.

    New Zealand 2050 (An Ageing New Zealand)

    Research Theme Leader: Professor Natalie Jackson

    This research theme looks at how inexorable demographic shifts will affect the nation's social and economic development over the first half of this century. Separate but overlapping projects address the likely effects of age structural transitions on a broad range of issues, such as labour supply and demand, and future welfare demand and provision.

    In 2011, much of NIDEA’s research under this theme focused on developing an overview of the demographic forces shaping the nation’s future. The first output in the new NIDEA Working Paper Series was named accordingly (see below) and findings from this work were presented by invitation to 12 audiences, among them the Royal Society’s Speakers Science Forum at Parliament on May 3rd, and featured in around 20 media interviews.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future. What population ageing [really] means, NIDEA Working Papers No. 1, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton.

    Also under this theme, Dr Andrew Coleman (Motu) has been working on PAYGO (pay as you go) and SAYGO (save as you go) retirement incomes, using demographic projections out to 2050 and beyond. Part of this work calculates how much each cohort up to the cohort turning 60 in 2046 will pay in taxes and will expect to receive in pension benefits.

    Coleman, A. (2011) PAYGO v SAYGO: Prefunding Government-Provide Pensions, Motu Note #8, Motu Economic and Public Policy Research, Wellington.

  • 11

    New Zealand’s regions and communities (A regionally and ethnically diverse New Zealand)

    Research Theme Leader: Adjunct Professor David Maré

    NIDEA’s ‘regions and communities’ theme concentrates on the sub-national dimensions of demographic, social and economic transformation, the dynamics and implications of which are not uniformly unfolding across the country. Projects include the changing role of Auckland, the settlement and integration of immigrants, and the end of growth in non-urban regions.

    In 2011, NIDEA Summer Scholars Rachael Hutt and Jennifer Weal began the task of updating a set of ten Discussion Papers focusing on New Zealand’s Regions, 1986-2006. This work continues, with three of the papers nearing completion. NIDEA Summer Scholars and Research Assistants also assisted Professor Natalie Jackson to begin developing a set of 85 socio-demographic profiles at Regional Council and Territorial Authority level. Several invited presentations and media interviews focused on these regional implications. Other work under this theme includes:

    Stillman, S. (2011) Labour Market Outcomes for Immigrants and the New Zealand-born 1997-2009. New Zealand Department of Labour IMSED Research Report (May).

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. and Poot, J. (2012) Social capital and regional social infrastructure investment: Evidence from New Zealand. International Regional Science Review, 35(1), 3-25 (published in 2011).

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. and Poot, J. (2011) Homeownership and social capital in New Zealand. Motu Working Paper 11-02. Wellington: Motu Economic and Public Policy Research. Pp.31.

    Cameron, M.P. and Poot, J. (2011) Lessons from stochastic small-area population projections: The case of Waikato subregions in New Zealand. Journal of Population Research, 28(2-3), 245-265.

    New Zealand's individuals, families and households (A socially informed New Zealand)

    Research Theme Leader: Professor Steven Stillman

    The ‘individuals, families and households’ theme focuses on the underlying human dimensions of demographic-social-economic interactions occurring in the context of low fertility and increased longevity. Projects include how changing family and household structures will affect the provision of the future workforce and tax base. Papers published during 2011 include:

    Crichton, S., Stillman, S. and Hyslop, D. (2011) Returning to work from injury: Longitudinal evidence on employment and earnings. Industrial and Labor Relations Review 64 (July), 5, 763-83.

    Grimes, A., Stillman, S. and Young, C. (2011) Homeownership, social capital and parental voice in schooling. IZA Discussion Paper 6168 (December). Motu Working Paper 12-02 (February).

    Hyslop, D. and Stillman, S. (2011) The impact of the 2008 youth minimum wage reform. New Zealand Department of Labour Research Report (August).

  • 12

    Te para one te tū mai nei (Māori and indigenous futures)

    Research Theme Leader: Dr Tahu Kukutai

    Te para one te tū mai nei is a forward-looking research programme that addresses the opportunities and challenges attendant with Māori demographic change. It focuses on research that makes a positive difference for Māori.

    Theme Leader Dr Tahu Kukutai spent much of 2011 working on her Marsden-funded study of ethnic counting and classification in censuses around the world over the past 30 years, as well as a separate study of Māori transnationalism and diaspora. She also played a lead role in work on two

    funded projects with Te Kotahi: Te Pou/Tipping Points and Provision of a Māori Plan for Tāmaki Makaurau (see Externally Funded Research below). 2011 outputs for the theme include:

    Kukutai, T. (2011) Building ethnic boundaries in New Zealand: Representations of Māori identity in the census. In P. Axelsson & P. Skold (ed/s) Indigenous Peoples and Demography: The Complex Relation between Identity and Statistics. Berghahn, 33-54.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) Contemporary Issues in Māori demography. In McIntosh, T. and Mulholland, M., editors, Māori and Social Issues. New Zealand, Huia.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) New Zealand's demographic futures: Challenges and opportunities. Population Association of New Zealand Biennial Conference: New Zealand Demographic Futures: Where to from here? University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; 28-29th November.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) The thin brown line: Re-indigenizing inequality in Aotearoa New Zealand. Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences Seminar Series. The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia; 6th July.

    Kukutai, T. & Didham, R. (2011) Re-making the majority? Ethnic New Zealanders in the 2006 census. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1-20.

    Kukutai, T. & Webber, M. (2011) Navigating the 'space between' authenticity and identity in 'Māori' social science. New Zealand Sociology. 26, 4-20.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) Imagining a post-settlement future: In this together?. PostTreatySettlements.org.nz. Victoria University‘s Institute of Policy Studies and Te Kawa a Māui/the School of Māori Studies, 1-4.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Māori and the [potential] collateral demographic dividend, NIDEA Working Papers No. 2, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton.

    Jackson, N. (2011) Māori: Ko te Whakatipu Tāngata hei Huanga Ohanga: Māori: Demographic dividend for economic return. (Report to Te Puni Kōkiri) New Zealand Institute for Economic Research, 1-34.

    Mullane-Ronaki, M. (2011) Finding the Māori demographic dividend: A literature review. NIDEA Summer Scholarship project.

    Pool, I. & Kukutai, T. (2011) Taupori Māori - Māori population change. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Wellington, http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/taupori-maori-maori-population-change/, 1-4.

    Pool, I, Pawar, S and Amey, B (2011) Estimating Maori GNI, 1891-96 to 1941-46 Population Association of New Zealand Biennial Conference: New Zealand Demographic Futures: Where to from here? University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; 28-29th November.

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    New Zealand's oceanic and global context (A globally engaged New Zealand)

    Research Theme Leaders: Professor Jacques Poot and Professor John Gibson

    This research theme addresses the cross-border dimensions of demographic-social-economic interactions, focussing on the links between New Zealand and other populations and economies within Oceania and beyond. Among its projects are the implications of national level demographic differences for future migration scenarios, and the implications of climate change and demand for water, with particular reference to Australia and the Pacific Islands.

    Rutledge, D.T., Sinclair, R.J., Tait, A., Poot, J., Dresser, M., Greenhalgh, S. and Cameron, M. (2011) Triggers and thresholds of land-use change in relation to climate change and other key trends – A review and assessment of potential implications for New Zealand. Landcare Research report for Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. Wellington: Pp. 114.

    Genc, M., Gheasi, M., Nijkamp, P. and Poot, J. (2011) the impact of immigration on international trade: A meta-analysis. IZA DP No. 6145. Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA). Available as Norface Discussion Paper 2011-20. www.norface-migration.org. Pp. 33.

    Van der Pas, S. and Poot, J. (2011) Migration paradigm shifts and transformation of migrant communities: The case of Dutch Kiwis. CReAM Discussion Paper No. 12/11. Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration, University College London. Pp. 38.

    Bedford, R.D., Bedford, C.E. and Corcoran, J. (2011) Tuvaluans and environmental change in the 21st century: Leveraging a legacy of international migration, Invited Address to the Conference on Climate Change and Migration in the Pacific: Legal and Policy Responses, New South Wales Parliament House, Sydney, 10th November.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) Contemporary patterns of international migration, Invited Address to the Foundations of International Migration Law Workshop, International Organization for Migration, Geneva, 5th May.

    Bedford, R.D., Bedford, C.E. and Corcoran, J. (2011) Uncertain times: International mobility of atoll dwellers in the central Pacific, Paper presented at the 16th International Metropolis Conference, Ponta Delgarda, Azores, 15th September.

    Bedford, R.D., Didham, R. and Ho, E.S. (2011) Contemporary Indian and Chinese migration to New Zealand, Paper presented at the 16th International Metropolis Conference, Ponta Delgarda, Azores, 14th September.

    Bedford, R.D. and Bedford, C.E. (2011) New Zealand’s Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) work policy: Is it delivering ‘wins’ to employers, workers and island communities? Pacific Seasonal Worker Pilot Scheme Conference 2011, Sofitel Hotel, Gold Coast, Australia, 4th August.

    Bedford, R.D. and Hugo, G. (2011) Migration, urbanisation and new diaspora: Reflections on future migration in the Pacific, Invited Address to the Pathways, Circuits and Crossroads Conference, City Gallery, Wellington, December 12th.

    Bedford, R.D. and Hugo, G. (2011) A watershed in the Pacific regional migration system? Invited Address to the Australia New Zealand Immigration Forum, Unysis House, Wellington, September 23rd.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) The changing face and future of immigration, Invited Address to the LexisNexis Immigration Law Conference, Rydges Hotel, Auckland, August 11th.

  • 14

    Bedford, R.D., Didham, R. and Hugo, G. (2011) The Pacific in New Zealand’s demographic future, Presentation to the Biennial Conference of the Population Association of New Zealand, Auckland, November 29th.

    NIDEA Demographic Laboratory (A demographically numerate New Zealand)

    Director: Professor Natalie Jackson

    The NIDEA Demographic Laboratory supports the five research themes by providing advanced analytical and technical support. It also acts as a provider of external training in demography via workshops, and plays a critical role in building capacity in the field to meet the needs of government and a broad range of organisations and enterprise. Indeed it is one of NIDEA’s main objectives to revitalise undergraduate teaching in population studies and demography, with a view to ensuring a continuing flow of graduates in this specialist field.

    Reflecting these desires, NIDEA Directorate staff in 2011 taught two undergraduate and two postgraduate courses in demography, and supervised eight summer scholars (four at each end of the year). Twenty-one students took the flagship Introduction to Population Studies paper (POPS201), an increase from 12 in 2010. One visiting international Masters student was also supervised.

    In Semester two, Professor Jackson was involved in a joint initiative between Statistics New Zealand and five New Zealand Universities to offer a post-graduate program in Official Statistics, via videolink (see http://msor.victoria.ac.nz/Courses/STOR481_2012T2/WebHome), run out of the University of Victoria. Facing small postgraduate numbers seeking training in this specialist field within each participating university, the collaborative effort resulted in 32 students taught nationally. The effort was rewarded (jointly with an Ethiopian initiative) an ISI International Statistical Literacy Project 'Best Cooperative Project Award'. This Award is given once every two years in recognition of outstanding, innovative, and influential statistical literacy projects that affect the general public and reflect the cooperation of different types of institutions. NIDEA is currently developing policies on future undergraduate teaching along these cross-institutional lines.

    In December, a two-day workshop on Official Statistics was given by Professor Jackson in Wellington, on behalf of Statistics New Zealand. Thirty-two public servants and policy advisors attended the well-received workshop entitled: Population ageing: Everything you wanted to know but were afraid to ask.

    http://msor.victoria.ac.nz/Courses/STOR481_2012T2/WebHome

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    Externally Funded Research

    As members of a research centre that seeks to recover the majority of its costs from external research, NIDEA’s staff devote most of their time to research, supervision, and seeking new project funding. During 2011 members of NIDEA participated in a number of on-going or new FoRST-funded research programmes and had several contracts with the Department of Labour, the Tertiary Education Commission, and local authorities in the Waikato and Bay of Plenty regions for the provision of research and policy advice.

    FRST-funded programmes that supported staff and postgraduate student research in NIDEA during 2011 were:

    Ageing in Place: Empowering Older People to Repair and Maintain Safe and Comfortable

    Houses in their Communities (2007-12, Centre for Research Evaluation and Social Assessment) with sub-contract for the research on older Asians with the University of Waikato.

    Integration of Immigrants Programme (IIP) (2007-12, Massey University with around half of the programme sub-contracted to the University of Waikato). Professor Jacques Poot leads one of the two objectives in this five-year programme, which finishes in September 2012, with Professor Paul Spoonley (Massey, Albany) leading the other objective. Professor Richard Bedford is assisting Paul Spoonley with the research for Objective 2. For outputs, see http://newsettlers.massey.,ac.nz/.

    Honohono ai ngā waka Māori e rere tonu ana: Linking together the ever voyaging Māori canoes (2009-2012, Synexe Consulting). Tahu Kukutai is an associate investigator on this programme.

    Ethnicity Counts. (2011-2013) Marsden Dr Tahu Kukutai.

    Engaging Senior Stakeholders – Positive Ageing at the Elder-Organisation Interface (2009 – 2012, Management School). Prof Koopman-Boyden and Dr Michael Cameron are members of the multi-disciplinary team.

    Other externally funded programmes and/or consultancies that supported staff and postgraduate student research in NIDEA during 2011 were (only Principal Investigators named):

    Migrant Diversity and Regional Disparity in Europe (2010-2013) Professor Jacques Poot.

    Infrastructure (2006-2011) Professor Arthur Grimes.

    Bay of Plenty District Health Board Future Workforce Study, Part 2 (Patient Demand)

    (2011) Professor Natalie Jackson, Professor Frank Scrimgeour.

    Bay of Plenty High Schools Student Destinations Survey (2011) Dr Yaghoob (Yaqub) Foroutan, Professor Natalie Jackson (One Overview Report and nine School Reports).

    http://newsettlers.massey.,ac.nz/

  • 16

    Socio-Demographic Profile of Hamilton’s Youth, Hamilton City Council (2011) Professor Natalie Jackson.

    Mobility and Migration Studies in Dunedin. Age 38 Assessments (2011-2012) Professor Richard Bedford.

    Utukura Valley Project (2011-2012) Dr Tahu Kukutai.

    Midlands Health Network Integrated Family Health Centre (IFHC) – Evaluation Methodology Scoping Phase (2011) Professor Natalie Jackson, Dr Antony Raymont, Professor Peggy Koopman-Boyden.

    A Pilot Evaluation of the Midlands Health Network Integrated Family Health Centre (IFHC) Model of Care (2011) Professor Natalie Jackson, Dr Antony Raymont.

    Te Pou/Tipping Points (2011-2012) with Te Kotahi (Professor Linda Smith, Professor Natalie Jackson, Dr Tahu Kukutai).

    Provision of a Māori Plan for Tamaki Makaurau (2011-2012) with Te Kotahi (Professor Linda Smith, Professor Natalie Jackson, Dr Tahu Kukutai).

    Internal Funding

    Work-Ability for older workers (2011) (Professor Natalie Jackson, Professor Michael O’Driscoll). A FASS contestable grant assisted Natalie and Mike to develop and run an online survey of University of Waikato employees, in terms of issues involved in working longer, and the factors which contribute to the retirement decision – or to a longer and healthy work life.

    Demographic Patterns and Differentials of Immigrants in New Zealand: Comparative and International Perspective (2011) by Dr Yaghoob (Yaqub) Foroutan. This was a Contestable Research Grant provided by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS), The University of Waikato. This project focused on the main dimensions, determinants, and differentials associated with demographic and socio-economic characteristics by migration status (i.e. whether New Zealand-born or overseas-born) and ethnic backgrounds. This analysis has provided further evidence to support the thesis that the status of immigrants is closely associated with ‘cultural and social distance’ and that the current status of migrants in terms of ‘cultural integration’ in the destination also needs to be investigated by their ‘experience of socialization’ in the origin (i.e. prior to migration).

    External Grants applied for

    Several staff members either lead, or were a member of, a research team which applied for external funding during the year, and in the process built valuable networks of researchers, both multi-disciplinary and inter-institutional, across New Zealand and overseas. Funding bodies applied to included: Marsden Fund (Professor Natalie Jackson, Dr Yaqub Foroutan, Professor Jacques Poot, Dr Michael Cameron), Health Research Council (Professor Peggy Koopman-Boyden). We await the outcome of several of these.

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    Postgraduate Supervision

    During 2011 the PhD students being supervised by PSC/NIDEA staff and NIDEA members were:

    Beckhusen, Julia. Purdue University (Prof. Raymond Florax, Prof. Brigitte Waldorf and Prof. Jacques Poot), Recent Immigrants in the US and their Economic Impacts.

    Bond-Smith, Steven. (Prof. Jacques Poot, Prof. Les Oxley and Prof. Philip McCann), Is Understanding Innovation the Key to Economic Growth? Theoretical Models and Analytical Simulations.

    Boyagoda, Kumudika. (Dr Rachel Simon-Kumar, Societies and Cultures, Prof. Natalie Jackson and Prof.. Richard Bedford) Heterogeneity among Female Headed Households in Sri Lanka: A study into vulnerability and survival in transitional development societies.

    Churchill, Brendan. University of Tasmania (Assoc. Prof. Maggie Walter, Assoc. Prof Keith Jacobs, and Prof. Natalie Jackson) Solutions or Substitutions? Examining Australia's Skills Shortage.

    Cochrane, William. (Prof. Jacques Poot, Prof. Philip McCann and the late Dr Paul Harris, who passed away in December 2010), Regional Diversity and Local Labour Market Outcomes in New Zealand.

    Corcoran, John. (Assoc. Prof. John Campbell (Geography), Assoc. Prof. Mike Goldsmith (Anthropology) and Prof. Richard Bedford (mentor)).

    Hodgson, Rob. (Prof. Jacques Poot, Adj. Prof. Dave Mare and Adj. Prof. Steve Stillman), Selection Effects and Economic Impacts of Migration on New Zealand.

    Krausse, Michael. (Prof. Frank Scrimgeour and Prof. Jacques Poot) Economic Resilience: Evidence from Australasia.

    Matlaba, Valente. (Prof. Mark Holmes, Prof. Jacques Poot and Prof. Philip McCann, Adj. Prof. Arthur Grimes), Regional Transformation in Brazil.

    Moosa, Sheena. (Prof. Peggy Koopman-Boyden, Prof. Natalie Jackson) Wellbeing and Social Connectedness of Older People in the Small Island Developing State of Maldives.

    Ozgen, Ceren. VU University Amsterdam (Prof. Peter Nijkamp and Prof. Jacques Poot), The Impact of International Migration on Regional Disparity.

    Roskruge, Matthew. (Prof. Jacques Poot, Prof. Phil McCann and Adj. Prof. Arthur Grimes (Motu) Understanding the Role of Social Capital in the Growth of New Zealand’s Economy.

    Sanderson, Lynda. (Prof. Jacques Poot, Adj. Prof. Arthur Grimes and Prof. Philip McCann), International Engagement and Performance of New Zealand Firms.

    Taylor, Lisa. University of Tasmania (Prof. Antony Arundel. Prof. Natalie Jackson), Utilisation of Skills in Australia.

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    Postgraduate Completions

    Cochrane, William. Regional Diversity and Local Labour Market Outcomes in New Zealand.

    (Prof. Jacques Poot, Prof. Philip McCann and the late Dr Paul Harris, who passed away in December 2010),

    Bill completed his doctoral research in 2011 with a thesis titled “A Spatial Econometric Analysis of Selected Local Labour Market Outcomes in New Zealand”. Aside from this he has been heavily involved, along with Dr Michael Cameron, in research funded by the Alcohol Advisory Council of New Zealand (ALAC) into the effect of liquor outlet density on alcohol related harms in Manukau City. ALAC have now granted further funding to this project so that the research can be extended to cover the entire North Island. In addition he has been involved in number of projections commissioned by local government on population projections and local labour market issues. Sanderson, Lynda. (Prof. Jacques Poot, Adj. Prof. Arthur Grimes and Prof. Philip McCann), International Engagement and Performance of New Zealand Firms. Lynda successfully defended her thesis in December 2011. Lynda is now working as a Senior Analyst at The Treasury in Wellington. Some thoughts from the field

    Kumudika Boyagoda: The year 2011 brought with it the most challenging period in my PhD work, with the commencement of converging theory, literature and empirical data to build up my thesis on “Heterogeneity among female-headed households in Sri Lanka: A study into vulnerability and survival in transitional development societies”. Apart from thesis writing, class room presentations related to my topic were for Masters students in the Gender Studies programme and also in the student/staff seminar series of the Department of Societies and Cultures. A presentation was also given to the FASS Post Graduate Conference on Social capital of female heads and its relationship to their coping strategies. I also had the pleasure of taking part in the Population Association of New Zealand Conference for the first time, and took up the challenge for the “Pop in 5” competition, awarded 2nd place, for a five minute presentation of my research.

    Sheena Moosa: 2011 was my first year at NIDEA. After six months of working on the research topic since April 2011 and with much guidance from my supervisors (Professor Peggy Koopman-Boyden and Professor Natalie Jackson), I received confirmation of enrolment for the PhD research topic “Wellbeing and social connectedness of older people in the small island developing state of Maldives” in September. As I continue my journey with this research, I took the opportunity to present my topic at the 2011 Conference of Population Association of New Zealand which was a great experience. Apart from my study, I enjoyed the NIDEA seminars and occasional 'afternoon tea' at NIDEA.

    Masters Supervision

    Rarere, Moana (Dr Tahu Kukutai) Iwi (Tribal) Demography: The Demographic Determinants of Iwi Identification Growth Patterns in the NZ Census.

    Rots, Jinko (Prof. Peggy Koopman-Boyden and Prof. Jacques Poot) Dutch Roots of Elderly Dutch Immigrants in New Zealand.

    Comello, Aneeke (Prof. Peggy Koopman-Boyden and Prof. Jacques Poot) Building a new life: Personal experiences and reflections of Post-WWII Dutch Immigrants.

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    Seminars

    Co-ordinated by Dr Yaghoob (Yaqub) Foroutan, NIDEA’s seminar series began in March. The following visitors presented in 2011. For abstract details see http://cms.its.waikato.ac.nz/nidea/events

    November 17th – Dr Yaghoob (Yaqub) Foroutan

    NIDEA, University of Waikato The Fateful Triangle: Gender, Migration, Religion

    October 28th – Professor Philip Morrison

    Victoria University of Wellington The Generational Switch in Suicide and Wellbeing

    October 13th – Professor Jacques Poot

    NIDEA, University of Waikato Cities in 2050: Demographic Drivers of Global Urban Change

    September 30th – Dr Sarah Baird, Craig McIntosh, Dr Berk Ozler,

    George Washington University, Development Research Group – World Bank Cash or Condition? Evidence from a Cash Transfer Experiment (Department of Economics in conjunction with NIDEA)

    September 27th – Dr Per Axelsson

    Umea University, Sweden Indigenous Health – Global and Local Patterns (NIDEA in conjunction with Te Kotahi Research Institute)

    September 15th – Professor Peter McDonald

    The Australian National University, President of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population The Determinants of Australia's Future Population: With implications for New Zealand

    August 18th – Emeritus Professor Ian Pool

    NIDEA, University of Waikato Compression of Mortality and Health Expectancies in New Zealand: Policy Implications

    July 21st – Professor Natalie Jackson

    NIDEA, University of Waikato Māori and the Potential Demographic Dividend

    http://cms.its.waikato.ac.nz/nidea/events

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    July 27th – Dr Arthur Grimes

    University of Waikato, MOTU, Chair of the Board of the Reserve Bank Knowledge Workforce Developments across 10 Australasian Cities (Department of Economics in conjunction with NIDEA)

    June 3rd – Mr Len Cook

    NIDEA Research Associate, Ex-Government Statistician of both NZ and Britain Demography and Public Policy: General Themes and Recent Experiences in New Zealand

    March 22nd – Professor Richard Slaughter

    Director, Foresight International, Brisbane Welcome to the Anthropocene (NIDEA in conjunction with the New Zealand Futures Trust and International Global Change Institute)

    Visitors

    In September we were honoured with a brief visit from Professor Peter McDonald of the Australian National University. President of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, Peter found time in his busy schedule to give a seminar in the NIDEA Seminar Series.

    Also in September NIDEA (Dr Tahu Kukutai) and Te Kotahi Research Institute (Professor Linda Smith) jointly hosted visiting scholar Dr Per Axelsson from the Center of Sami Research, Umeǻ University, Sweden. During his visit Per gave a seminar ‘Indigenous health – global and local patterns’ , and worked with Dr Kukutai on a proposal to undertake a comparative study of the demographic impacts of colonisation on indigenous peoples in New Zealand, Australia and Sweden.

    June – Mr Len Cook, NIDEA Research Associate but better known for his roles as Government Statistician of New Zealand (January 1992 to May 2000) and head of the United Kingdom Office for National Statistics (May 2000 to August 2005) paid us two visits during 2011.

    Anneke Comello – Masters student from Radboud University in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, visited from September to November and studied the integration of New Zealand’s Dutch Immigrants in the 1950s from their early correspondence with family back home. Anneka’s visit was supervised by Prof. Peggy Koopman-Boyden, Prof. Jacques Poot and Dr Rosaline McClean.

    Jinko Rotts – Masters student from University of Groningen, the Netherlands, spent 2 months (February and March) at NIDEA undertaking research into the social life, habits, customs and sense of belonging of elderly Dutch immigrants to New Zealand, who left Holland over forty years ago. Jinko’s visit was supervised by Prof. Peggy Koopman-Boyden and Prof. Jacques Poot.

    Ngaire Coombs, PhD candidate from University of Southampton, spent January and February finalising elements of her thesis with Emeritus Professor Ian Pool. Ngarie’s doctorate was unanimously awarded during the year.

    Jan-Feb – Dr Victor Thompson from Philadelphia came to work with Dr Tahu Kukutai on her Marsden – Ethnicity Counts.

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    Professor Graeme Hugo (Director of the Australian Population and Migrant Research Centre at the University of Adelaide), visited NIDEA for several days during 2011 and contributed to discussions on migration. Professor Hugo played an integral role in the launch of NIDEA in 2010.

    Summer Scholars

    Summer 2010-2011

    Rachael Hutt – Joining the dots: Linking two decades of socio-demographic trends (Natalie Jackson)

    Moana Rarere – The global Māori diaspora (Tahu Kukutai) Jennifer Weal – Joining the dots: Linking two decades of socio-demographic trends (Natalie

    Jackson) Jaimee Phillips (nee Frew) – Returns to foreign and domestic education in New Zealand (Jacques

    Poot)

    Summer 2011-2012

    David Greenslade - When does population growth end? (Natalie Jackson) Maraea Mullane-Ronaki – Finding the Maori demographic dividend (Tahu Kukutai / Natalie

    Jackson) Frances Cox-Wright - Family representation in educational institutions (Yaghoob Foroutan) Luana Dow - Learning from the flood of numbers: The practice of meta-analysis in economics

    (Jacques Poot)

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    Major International Conference Contributions

    Invited Keynote and Plenary Presentations - International

    - by Professor Natalie Jackson:

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Comparing Australia’s population growth challenges with New Zealand, Keynote Address to Population Australia 2050 Summit, Melbourne, Australia, 27th September.

    - by Professor Jacques Poot:

    Poot, J. (2011) The colour of future cities: Grey or a rainbow? Invited keynote presentation to the High Level Session Annex Panel: “The New Urban World”, 51st ERSA Conference, Barcelona, 31st August.

    Poot, J. (2011) Strangers on the move: Advances in migration impact assessment. Invited presentation at the Round Table Discussion on Sciences, Culture and Society: Mobility and Integration. Academia Europaea, UNESCO Headquarters, Paris, 20th September.

    - by Dr Yaghoob (Yaqub) Foroutan:

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Work Patterns of Migrant Women from the MENA: Analyses from inside and outside the region. Invited presentation at The European Commission Funded International Workshop on Migration and Development: The Role of Women in Migration and Development, Brussels, Belgium, 1-2 February.

    Other International Presentations Bedford, R.D. (2011) Contemporary patterns of international migration. Foundations of International

    Migration Law Authors’ Workshop, International Organisation for Migration, Geneva, 5-6th May.

    Bedford, R.D and Bedford, C.E. (2011) New Zealand’s Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) work policy: Is it delivering ‘wins’ to employers, workers and island communities? Pacific Seasonal Worker Pilot Scheme Conference 2011, Sofitel Hotel, Gold Coast, Australia, 3-5th August.

    Bedford, R.D., Bedford, C.E. and Corcoran, J. (2011) Uncertain times: International mobility of atoll dwellers in the central Pacific. Paper presented at the 156h International Metropolis Conference, the Azores, Portugal, 12-16th September.

    Bedford, R.D., Bedford, C.E. and Corcoran, J. (2011) Tuvaluans and environmental change in the 21st century: Leveraging a legacy of international migration. Invited paper to the Conference on Climate Change and Migration in the Asia-Pacific: Legal and Policy Responses, New South Wales Parliament House, Sydney, 10-11th November.

    Bedford, R.D., Didham, R., and Ho, E. (2011) Contemporary Indian and Chinese migration to New Zealand. Paper presented at the 16th International Metropolis Conference, the Azores, Portugal, 12-16th September.

    Beckhusen, J. B., Florax, R. J., Poot, J. & Waldorf, B. (2011) Job-education mismatch and the crowding-out of American workers. 51st Congress of the European Regional Science

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    Association International Conference. University of Barcelona, Spain; 30 August-3rd September.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Values of immigrants’ family or values of residing society? A typical pattern. Population Association of America (PAA) 2011 Annual Meeting. Washington DC, United States; 31st March – 2nd April.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Demographic perspective on women’s status and religion: Multicultural investigation. Population Association of America (PAA) 2011 Annual Meeting. Washington DC, United States, 31st March - 2nd April. p.1-42.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Living on the Edge? Competing influence of religion and migration. 31st International Society for the Sociology of Religion Conference (ISSR). Aix-en-Provence, France; 30th June – 3rd July 2011.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) The portrayal of religious teachings in the books: A case study / Le portrait de l’enseignement religieux dans les livres: une étude de cas. 31st International Society for the Sociology of Religion (ISSR) Conference. Aix-en-Provence, France; 30th June – 3rd July.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Language diversity and gender identity: A developing world investigation. 3rd International Conference on Language, Education and Diversity (LED). University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; 23-26th November.

    Genc, M., Gheasi, M., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) The impact of immigration on international trade: A meta-analysis. International Workshop on Immigration and Economic Growth, Amsterdam School of Economics, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 23-24th June. p.1-30.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) New Zealand and the Pacific, Invited address to the Australian Population Association AGM, Canberra, 22nd September.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) The thin brown line: Re-indigenizing inequality in Aotearoa New Zealand. Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences Seminar Series. The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia; 6th July.

    Phillips, J., Poot, J. & Roskruge, M. (2011) Differences in returns to foreign and domestic education in New Zealand. 58th Annual North American Meetings of the Regional Science Association International. Miami, Florida, United States of America; 9-12th November.

    Pinkerton, R. M., Mare, D. C. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigrant segregation in Auckland, New Zealand. Presentation at Migration: Economic Change, Social Challenge. University College London; United Kingdom; 6-9th April. p.1-54.

    Poot , J. (2011) Rethinking the concept and measurement of diversity. Presentation at Migrant Diversity and Regional Disparity in Europe (MIDI-REDI) Team Meeting, University College London, 7 April.

    Poot, J. (2011) The impact of immigration on innovation: Evidence from Europe and New Zealand. Presentation at Seminar in Agricultural Economics: Advanced Topics in Space, Health and Population Economics. Purdue University, United States of America; 26th August. p.1-30.

    Poot, J. (2011) Assessing the impact of age composition on aggregate saving rates: A meta-analytical approach. MAER-Net Colloquium. University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 16-18th September.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigration and innovation in European regions. Presentation at Migration: Economic Change, Social Challenge. University College London, United Kingdom; 6-9th April. p.1-34.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) The impact of foreign workers on innovation and local knowledge spillovers: Analysis of survey data from the Netherlands. Presentation at

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    Migration: Economic Change, Social Challenge. University College London, United Kingdom; 6-9th April. p.1-26.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Are culturally diverse firms more innovative? Evidence from the Netherlands. Presentation at 51st Congress of the European Regional Science Association International. University of Barcelona, Spain; 30th August-3rd September. p.1-20.

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigrant integration and social capital formation. Presentation at 58th Annual North American Meetings of the Regional Science Association International. Miami, Florida, United States of America; 9-12th November.

    Major National Conference Contributions

    Invited Keynote and Plenary Presentations – National Bedford, R.D. (2011) The changing face of Pacific migration to New Zealand: A review of the evidence.

    Invited paper, Continuing Pasifika Education Conference, University of Auckland and AUT University, Manukau; 3-5th July.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) The changing face and future of immigration. Invited paper, LexisNexis Immigration Law Conference, Rydges Hotel, Auckland; 11-12th August.

    Bedford, R.D. and Hugo, G. (2011) Migration, urbanisation and new diaspora: reflections on future migration patterns in the Pacific. Invited paper for the Pathways, Circuits and Crossroads Conference “Immigration in the Second Decade of the 21st Century: Policies and Practice”, City Gallery, Wellington; 12-13th December.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demography of changing times – trends and challenges for New Zealand. Keynote Address to the NZ Chief Financial Officers Annual Conference, Auckland; 15th February.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) WISE-ing up to caring capacity. All hands to the pump. Keynote Address to Age-WISE. Taking Care of the Future, Hamilton; 25th March.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Bridging the generation gap. A demographic perspective. Keynote Address to the Property Institute of New Zealand, Annual Conference, Wellington; 26th May.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future, Plenary Address, Biennial Conference of the Population Association of New Zealand, Auckland; 28-29th.

    Poot, J., Phillips, J. & Roskruge, M. (2011) Differences in returns to foreign and domestic education in New Zealand. Pathways, Circuits and Crossroads: Immigration in the Second Decade of the 21st Century: Policies and Practice. Wellington, New Zealand; 12-13th December.

    Poot, J. (2011) Economic research on diversity: International perspectives. New Zealand Diversity Forum: People in Harmony. Claudelands Events Centre, Hamilton, New Zealand; 21-22nd August.

    Other Invited Presentations / Workshops Bedford, R.D. and Bedford, C.E. (2011) Productivity of RSE and non-RSE workers: A proposal. Invited

    presentation to the Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) Conference, Brentwood Hotel, Wellington; 30th June – 1st July.

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    Bedford, R.D. (2011) People on the move: Changing migration patterns in a turbulent world. Invited presentation to the Wairarapa Branch of the New Zealand Institute of International Affairs, Masterton; 17th August.

    Bedford, R.D. and Hugo, G. (2011) A watershed in the Pacific regional migration system? Invited presentation to the Australia New Zealand Immigration Forum, Unisys House, Wellington; 23rd September.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) Continuity through change: social research in a constrained funding environment. Invited presentation to the 30th Anniversary of the Association of Social Science Researchers, Te Puni Kokori, Wellington; 16th November.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) Research and innovation. Invited presentation to the New Zealand Tertiary Education Summit, Informa Higher Education Series, Wellington; 28-29th November.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011), ‘Immigrants’ Integration in the Labour Market: Patterns and Determinants’, Paper presented to the Research Seminar Series of Research, Evaluation, and Monitoring Policy and Research Group Department of Labour, Wellington, New Zealand, 17th of May.

    Jackson, N. (2011) The demographic character and dynamics contemporary Waikato: Challenges and opportunities ahead. Waikato Branch of the New Zealand Geographical Society. University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand; 3rd March.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) All hands to the pump. Population ageing and the A-B-C of educational demand, Invited Address to Teachers Update Day, Auckland; 4th March.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Stop my career! I want to get off!! But can I?? Educating Rita and other efficiency gains, Invited presentation to the Association of Women in the Sciences (AWIS) Mini Conference, Ruakura; 6th April.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Wake-up time: Kiwi complacency about the costs of the ageing population, Invited Breakfast Briefing, Retirement Policy and Research Centre, University of Auckland; 19th April. http://lists.community.net.nz/cna/?p=10174

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Demographic Trends and Futures – Hastings and its Regions, Invited presentation to Hastings District Council via Skype; 27th April.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) What population ageing [really] means. Some sobering realities, Invited Address to the Speakers Science Forum, Organised by the Royal Society of New Zealand, The Grand Hall, Parliament; 3rd May.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Budgeting for our children. Invited Address, Post-Budget Presentation to Poverty Action Waikato and Public Service Association, Celebrating Age Centre, Hamilton; 23rd May.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future, Invited Address to the New Zealand Society of Actuaries, Wellington; 26th May.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future (Part 2), Invited Address to the New Zealand Fabian Society, Auckland; 9th June.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Demographic trends and futures – Midlands / Central Region, Invited Address to SOLGM Midlands / Central Combined Branch Meeting, Taupo; 15th August.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) All you ever wanted to know about population ageing but were afraid to ask, Two-day Workshop for Statistics New Zealand Official Statistics Training, Wellington; 9-10th November.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future, Invited Address to the Waikato Mathematical Association AGM, Hamilton; 24th November.

    http://lists.community.net.nz/cna/?p=10174

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    Jackson, N.O., Pawar, S., and Cooper, J. (2011) Socio-Demographic Profile of Youth (2011) – Hamilton City, Presentation to Hamilton City Council Youth Team; 18th October.

    Koopman-Boyden, P. (2011) Ageing the Silent Revolution. Invited Address to Rural Women, Ruakura; 13th April.

    Koopman-Boyden, P. (2011) Breaking News re Older People and Parkinsons. Invited Address to the Parkinsons Society, Hamilton; 10th November.

    Koopman-Boyden, P. (2011) Social Connectedness. Invited Address to the AgeWISE seminars, Waikato District Board.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) New Zealand's demographic futures: Challenges and opportunities. Population Association of New Zealand Biennial Conference: New Zealand Demographic Futures: Where to from here?. University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; 28-29th November.

    Pool, I. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future (Part 1), Invited Address to the New Zealand Fabian Society, Auckland; 9th June.

    Pool, I. (2011) The Demographic Impacts of Maori Resource Loss, with Particular Reference to Taranaki, Invited presentation to Ngati Mutunga as a part of their Exhibition on Te Rangi Hiroa (Sir Peter Buck, DSO, MD, FRSNZ), Te Puke Ariki (New Plymouth Museum); 27th November.

    Other Presentations Bedford, R.D., Didham, R. and Hugo, G. (2011) The Pacific in New Zealand’s demographic future.

    Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

    Daldy, B., Poot, J., Roskruge, M. & van Dyk, M. (2011) Immigrant integration and workplace discrimination in New Zealand. 52nd Annual Conference of the New Zealand Association of Economists. Wellington, New Zealand; 29th June – 1st July. p.1-20.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Demographic consequences of migration and social change: Cross-cultural comparisons. Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) The fateful triangle: gender, religion, migration. NIDEA Seminar Series. University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand; 17th November.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Jackson, N.O. (2011) Māori and the [potential] demographic dividend, NIDEA Seminar Series. University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand; 21st July.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Māori and the potential [collateral] demographic dividend. Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

    Koopman-Boyden, P.G. & Barrett, P. (2011) Do we have enough unpaid carers? Planning for a more caring society. AgeWISE Seminar. Hamilton, New Zealand, 25th March. p.1-13.

    Koopman-Boyden, P. (2011) Options for responding to the projected shortfall of carers in an Ageing Society. Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

    Kukutai, T. & Thompson, V. (2011) Ethnic counting in the Pacific 1965 to 2010. Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

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    Kukutai, T. & Cooper, J. (2011) Theorising the global Māori diaspora. Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) The New Zealand Census: Counting people, making people count. Awatere Club. Hamilton, New Zealand; 9th May.

    Mare, D.C., Pinkerton, R. & Poot, J. (2011) The residential location of immigrants in Auckland. Pathways, Circuits and Crossroads: Immigration in the Second Decade of the 21st Century: Policies and Practice. Wellington, New Zealand; 12-13th December.

    Phillips, J. (2011) Differences in returns to foreign and domestic education in New Zealand. Student poster at the Annual Conference of the New Zealand Association of Economists, Amora Hotel, Wellington; 29th June – 1st July (supervised by J Poot and M Roskruge).

    Pool, I., Pawar, S. and Amey, B. (2011) Estimating Maori GNI, 1890s to 1940s, Biennial Conference of the Population Association of New Zealand, Auckland; 29th November.

    Roskruge, M., Daldy, B. and Poot, J. (2011) Immigrant integration and workplace discrimination in New Zealand. Paper presented at the Pathways, Circuits and Crossroads Conference, City Gallery Wellington; 12-13th December.

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigrant integration and social capital formation. 52nd Annual Conference of the New Zealand Association of Economists. Wellington, New Zealand; 29th June - 1st July. p.1-20.

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigrant integration and social capital formation. Paper presented at the Population Association of New Zealand (PANZ) Conference, University of Auckland, Auckland; 28-29th November.

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    Publications/Outputs

    Articles in refereed journals Akgün, A. A., Baycan Levent, T., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Roles of local and newcomer

    entrepreneurs in rural development: A comparative meta-analytic study. Regional Studies, 45(9), 1207-1223.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) Reflections on a region: New Zealand geographers and the study of Pacific peoples with special reference to the period 1945-1970. New Zealand Geographer, 67(3), 126-138.

    Bedford, R.D., Callister, P. and Didham, R. (2011) Missing men and unacknowledged women: explaining gender disparities in New Zealand’s prime adult age groups, 1986-2006. New Zealand Population Review, 36, 1-26.

    Cameron, M.P. & Poot, J. (2011) Lessons from stochastic small-area population projections: The case of Waikato subregions in New Zealand. Journal of Population Research, 28(2-3), 245-265.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Ethnic and religious discrimination? A multicultural analysis of Muslim minorities in the West. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 31(3), 327-338.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Multiculturalism and women's employment: A sociological perspective. New Zealand Sociology. 26(1), 122-142.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Representation of Women's Employment in the Textbooks of Iranian Schools (in Persian). Women in Development and Politics (Women’s Research), 9 (2 (33)): 39-78.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Women and Language: Representation of gender identity in the Farsi, Arabic and English Textbooks of Iranian Schools (in Persian). Women’s Studies, 9 (2): 161-181.

    Gibson, J., McKenzie, D. & Stillman, S. (2011) The impacts of international migration on remaining household members: Omnibus results from a migration lottery program. The Review of Economics and Statistics, 93(4), 1297-1318.

    Gibson, J., McKenzie, D. & Stillman, S. (2011) What happens to diet and child health when migration splits households? Evidence from a migration lottery program. Food Policy, 36(1), 7-15.

    Kukutai, T. & Webber, M. (2011) Navigating the 'space between' authenticity and identity in 'Māori' social science. New Zealand Sociology. 26, 4-20.

    Kukutai, T. & Didham, R. (2011) Re-making the majority? Ethnic New Zealanders in the 2006 census. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 1-20.

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Social capital and regional social infrastructure investment: Evidence from New Zealand. International Regional Science Review, 1-23.

    Seuffert, N. & Kukutai, T. (2011) Introduction. Law Text Culture, 15, 1-7. University of Wollongong.

    Non-refereed journal articles Bedford, R.D. (2010) Responding to the urbanisation of Melanesia’s populations: A critical 21st century

    challenge. Pacific Economic Bulletin, 25(3), 242-244.

    Bedford, R.D. (2011) Pacific migration and urbanisation. Future Times. 2011/1, 10.

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    Bedford, R.D. (2011) Pacific populations in the first half of the 21st century. Pacific News, 35, Jan-Feb. 2011, 28-31.

    Poot, J. (2011) Building activity brings many benefits for NZ. Build. v125, August/September. BRANZ, Wellington, 30-31.

    Poot, J. (2011) Provincial gains. The Economist. April 2nd, p. 16.

    Chapters in books Koopman-Boyden, P. (2011) Older New Zealanders. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.

    Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Wellington, www.teara.govt.nz/en/older-people p1-15.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) Building ethnic boundaries in New Zealand: Representations of Maori identity in the census. In P. Axelsson & P. Skold (ed/s) Indigenous Peoples and Demography: The Complex Relation between Identity and Statistics. Berghahn, 33-54.

    Kukutai, T. (2011) Contemporary issues in Maori demography. In McIntosh, T. and Mulholland, M., editors, Maori and Social Issues. New Zealand, Huia.

    Pool, I. (2011) Population Change. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Wellington, www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/population-change

    Pool, I. (2011) Death Rates and Life Expectancy. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Wellington, www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/death-rates-and-life-expectancy

    Pool, I. and Du Plessis, R. (2011) Family History. Te Ara On-Line Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/family-history

    Pool, I. & Kukutai, T. (2011) Taupori Māori - Māori population change. Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage, Wellington, http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/taupori-maori-maori-population-change/, 1-4.

    Essays Kukutai, T. (2011) Imagining a post-settlement future: In this together?.

    PostTreatySettlements.org.nz. Victoria University‘s Institute of Policy Studies and Te Kawa a Māui/the School of Māori Studies, 1-4.

    Technical Reports Rutledge, D.T., Cameron, M., Elliott, S., Hurkens, J., McDonald, G., McBride, G., Phyn, D., Poot, J.,

    Price, R., Schmidt, J., van Delden, H., Tait, A. & Woods, R. (2011) WISE: Waikato Integrated Scenario Explorer - Technical Specifications Version 1.1. Landcare Research NZ Ltd, 1-103.

    Papers in published conference proceedings Foroutan, Y. (2011) Gender and education: Empirical observations. In H. Dixon, E. van Til & R.

    Williams (ed/s) Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the New Zealand Association for Research in Education (NZARE). New Zealand Association for Research in Education, Conference held at University of Auckland, New Zealand; 6 – 9th December 2010. p.20-27.

    http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/older-peoplehttp://www.teara.govt.nz/en/family-historyhttp://www.teara.govt.nz/en/taupori-maori-maori-population-change/

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    Commissioned Research Reports Bedford, R.D. and Hugo, G. (2011) Population movement in the Pacific: A perspective on future

    prospects. Unpublished report commissioned by the Department of Labour (New Zealand) and the Department of Immigration and Citizenship (Australia), September, 136pages.

    Cameron, M.P., Cochrane, W. & Jackson, N. (2011) SmartGrowth review demographic and employment projections project. Report to SmartGrowth Implementation Management Growth Group (SGIMG) National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis (NIDEA), University of Waikato, 10pages.

    Jackson, N. (2011) Māori: Ko te Whakatipu Tāngata hei Huanga Ohanga: Māori: Demographic dividend for economic return. (Report to Te Puni Kōkiri) New Zealand Institute for Economic Research, 34pages.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011). Hastings District - Socio-Demographic Profile 1986-2011, Commissioned Report for the Hastings Council, Hamilton (November), 70 pages.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011). Napier District - Socio-Demographic Profile 1986-2011, Commissioned Report for the Napier Council, Hamilton (November), 69 pages.

    Jackson, N.O., Pawar, S., and Cooper, J. (2011) Socio-Demographic Profile of Youth (2011) – Hamilton City, Consultants Report for Hamilton City Council, 46 pages.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Demographic trends and their implications for Maori economic futures, Consultants Report for New Zealand Institute of Economic Research, Wellington, Te Puni Kokiri, 30 pages.

    Jackson, N.O. and Pawar, S. (2011) Future workforce study - Patient demand: Bay of Plenty District Health Board, Part B, Section 2, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton. (December 2011), 196 pages.

    Jackson, N.O. October (2011) A socio-demographic profile of the Bay of Plenty and its implications for future growth of tertiary education in the region, Internal Report prepared for the University of Waikato Academic Planning Committee, Hamilton (October, 24 pages.

    Jackson, N.O. October (2011) University of Waikato (Hamilton and Tauranga Campuses) - Demographic-based student projections to 2031, Internal report prepared for the University of Waikato Academic Planning Committee, Hamilton, (October), 12 pages.

    Foroutan, Y. (2011) Study Intention Survey 2010: Research report March 2011. Report to University of Waikato and Bay of Plenty Polytechnic, University of Waikato, 29 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Hutt, R. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey - Aquinas College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Hutt, R. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions survey – Tauranga Boys College, Commissioned report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Hutt, R. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey – Tauranga Girls College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

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    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Hutt, R. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey - Waihi College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Weal, J. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey – Te Puke High School, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Weal, J. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey - Bethlehem College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Weal, J. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey - Katikati College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Weal, J. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey – Mt Maunganui College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Foroutan, Y., Jackson, N.O. with Weal, J. (2011) Bay of Plenty Study Intentions Survey - Otumoetai College, Commissioned Report for Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and University of Waikato, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, 10 pages.

    Rutledge, D.T., Sinclair, R.J., Tait, A., Poot, J., Dresser, M., Greenhaigh, S. & Cameron, M. (2011) Triggers and thresholds of land-use change in relation to climate change and other key trends: A review and assessment of potential implications for New Zealand. (Report to Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry) Landcare Research, 114 pages.

    Discussion and Working Papers Genc, M., Gheasi, M., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) The impact of immigration on international trade:

    A meta analysis. Norface Migration Discussion Paper. No. 2011-20, Norface Migration, 35 pages.

    Genc, M., Gheasi, M., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) The impact of immigration on international trade: A meta-analysis. IZA Discussion Paper Series. IZA DP No. 6145, IZA Institute for the Study of Labor, 36 pages.

    Grimes, A. (2011) Building bridges: Treating a new transport link as a real option. Motu Working Paper. 11-12,18 pages.

    Grimes, A., Stillman, S. & Young, C. (2011) Homeownership, social capital and parental voice in schooling. Motu Working Paper. 11-11, 26 pages.

    Hodgson, R. & Poot, J. (2011) New Zealand research on the economic impacts of immigration 2005-2010: Synthesis and research agenda. CReAM Discussion Paper Series. CDP No 04/11, Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration, University College London, 60 pages.

    Jackson, N.O. (2011) The demographic forces shaping New Zealand’s future. What population ageing [really] means, NIDEA Working Papers No. 1, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton.

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    Jackson, N.O. (2011) Māori and the [potential] collateral demographic dividend, NIDEA Working Papers No. 2, National Institute of Demographic and Economic Analysis, University of Waikato, Hamilton.

    Matlaba, V.J., Poot, J., Holmes, M.J. & McCann, P. (2011) A century of the evolution of the urban system in Brazil. Department of Economics, Working Paper in Economics 12/11, University of Waikato, 23 pages.

    Ozgen, C., van Eijndhoven, E., Nijkamp, P. and Poot, J. (2011) Data manual: Immigration and innovation in European regions. Department of Spatial Economics, VU University Amsterdam. www.norface-migration.org, 60 pages.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigration and innovation in European regions. IZA Discussion Paper Series. IZA DP No. 5676, IZA Institute for the Study of Labor, 33 pages.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Immigration and innovation in European regions. Norface Migration Discussion Paper. No. 2011-8, Norface Migration, 32 pages.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) The impact of cultural diversity on innovation: Evidence from Dutch firm-level data. Norface Migration Discussion Paper. Discussion Paper No. 2011-13, Norface Migration, www.norface-migration.org, 30 pages.

    Ozgen, C., Nijkamp, P. & Poot, J. (2011) The impact of cultural diversity on innovation: Evidence from Dutch firm-level data. IZA Discussion Paper. IZA DP No. 6000, The Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA), Bonn, 30 pages.

    Roskruge, M., Grimes, A., McCann, P. & Poot, J. (2011) Homeownership and social capital in New Zealand. Motu Working Paper. 11-02, Motu Economic and Public Policy Research, 31 pages.

    Van der Pas, S. & Poot, J. (2011) Migration paradigm shifts and transformation of migrant communities: The case of Dutch Kiwis. CReAM Discussion Paper Series. CDP No 12/11, Centre for Research and Analysis of Migration, 42 pages.

    Other Public and Community Engagement

    - by Professor Natalie Jackson

    October 4th: Invited participation, Tertiary Education Commission’s ‘Tertiary needs diagnostic framework’, Wellington.

    April. Māori Business Event, WaikatoLink Ltd., Telecom Playhouse, WEL Energy Trust Academy of Performing Arts, The University of Waikato

    -by Emeritus Professor Ian Pool

    May 12th: Invited Plenary Presentation, National Leaders’ Annual Meeting, Ministry of Social Development, Westpac Arena, Wellington

    http://www.norface-migration.org/

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    Media Interviews/Citations

    - by Professor Dick Bedford:

    06.06.2011 (Radio NZ News) Government considering 10 year census quoted Professor Dick Bedford http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/79332/government-considering-10-year-census

    04.06.2011 (Pacific Scoop) NZ must plan for future before Pacific population growth gets ‘out of hand’ (Taberannang Korauaba) quotes Professor Dick Bedford http://pacific.scoop.co.nz/2011/07/nz-must-plan-for-future-before-pacific-overpopulation-gets-out-of-hand/

    - by Dr Michael Cameron:

    22.01.2011, (NZ Herald) The cost of warped financial expectations (Diana Clement) referenced the EWAS research chapters by Charles Waldegrave and Michael Cameron.http://www.nzherald.co.nz/personal-finance/news/article.cfm?c_id=12&objectid=10701168

    02.04.2011, (Waikato Times) Big pot lures the punters (Jonathon Carson) - Michael Cameron was asked for comment. http://www.stuff.co.nz/waikato-times/news/4840143/Big-pot-lures-the-punters

    - by Professor Natalie Jackson:

    30.11.2011 (Waikato Times) 'Vulnerable' time ahead for population increase (Jonathan Carson) p.2 http://www.stuff.co.nz/waikato-times/news/6058446/Vulnerable-time-ahead-for-population-increase

    26.11.2011 (NZ Herald) Population rises over in rural areas - study (Simon Collins) p. A13 http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10768808

    31.10.2011 (Dominion Post) How many people will Boo share the beach with? (Bronwyn Torrie, Antonio Bradley, Kate Newton) p1. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/5878913/How-many-people-will-Boo-share-the-beach-with

    28.10.2011 (Fairfax NZ) Pension Change 'too late for boomers' (Michelle Robinson) http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/5873014/Pension-change-too-late-for-boomers

    28.10.2011 (3News) Raising retirement age will come too late – demographer http://www.3news.co.nz/Raising-retirement-age-will-come-too-late---demographer/tabid/419/articleID/231001/Default.aspx

    27.10.2011 (TV1) News.. Retirement policy (Michael Parkin) 27.10.2011 (Radio 95bfm Auckland) World population at 7 billion (Jon Armistead)

    http://www.95bfm.co.nz/assets/sm/202515/3/nataliejacksonon7billionpopulation.mp3 25.10.2011 (Radio NZ Live) World population at 7 billion (Paul Henry)

    http://www.radiolive.co.nz/World-population-to-hit-15-billion-by-2100/tabid/506/articleID/24010/Default.aspx

    03.08.2011 (Online Opinion) Adding more salt to the wounds of Gen Y (Fiona Heinrichs), http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=12408

    24.07.2011 (Sunday Examiner, Tasmania, Australia) Populations are declining and jobs are disappearing: Small towns under threat (Rosemary Bolger)

    21.07.2011 (Waikato Times) Maori role in workforce vital (Kashka Tunstall), http://www.stuff.co.nz/waikato-times/news/5318635/Maori-