Kia ora koutou, The PJH Staff Lift will be unavailable for use from Monday 16 November to mid Jan for a much needed refit. There will be appropriate barriers at each level. The Staff entrance may be blocked for an hour or two at a time when large pieces of equipment are moved in or out. As this is a fire exit this will be kept to a minimum.
The other four lifts will be available for use but please note that the Library will moving a significant number of items from PJH to storage before Christmas so occasionally there may be some delays.
If you have any issues relating to the Staff lift, please contact Alan Green. Any issues relating to the Library storage project, please contact Jenny Owens or Sue Thompson.
Kia ora koutou We will be farewelling Jo on Thu 19 November from 3-4 in the Te Ao Mārama outside area. Wet weather details will be added to Counterculture closer to the time if required.
You will shortly receive an Outlook calendar invitation: please respond for catering purposes.
Kia ora koutou, We are going to update the all staff photo, traditionally held on the Puaka James Hight steps. The last one was taken around 6 years ago.
When: Tue 10 Nov 12pm Where: Puaka James Hight steps
Please arrive 5 mins early if you can so we can get organised. I’ll send a calendar invite as a reminder.
Join the Global Indigenous Data Alliance (GIDA), Te Mana Raraunga – The Maori Data Sovereignty Network, the US Indigenous Data Sovereignty Network (USIDSN), and ORCID in this
The overall goal is to bring communities together around shared needs to access research data; to discuss ethics of contribution and consent regarding access to Indigenous data; to explore operationalising the CARE Principles for Indigenous Data Governance alongside the FAIR data principles for Indigenous data; and explore the Traditional Knowledge (TK) and Biocultural (BC) Labels as a key innovative tool that creates metadata around the provenance of Indigenous data that can endure within digital and data infrastructures and information systems.
Speakers: Katharina Ruckstuhl (University of Otago), Maui Hudson (University of Waikato), Jane Anderson (New York University), Brian Minihan (ORCID)