Datasets

Datasets are arranged by type. Click on a dataset name to expand its description (including date range) as well as to download a .csv of current data and a .pdf codebook that documents included variables. For information on how to cite this data please visit our how to cite page.

Data for the New Zealand Supreme Court are forthcoming.

When using the data, please add the following citation: “The data in the New Zealand Policy Agendas Project have been collected by Rhonda Evans and a team of graduate and undergraduate students with support from the Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.”

Research

Policy Agendas of National Courts: Australia and New Zealand Compared
Rhonda Evans and Rebecca Eissler, “Policy Agendas of National Courts: Australia and New Zealand Compared,” 8th Annual Comparative Policy Agendas Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, 22-24 June 2015. Read more

 

Comparing High Court Policy Agendas: Australia and New Zealand
Rhonda Evans and Rebecca Eissler, “Comparing High Court Policy Agendas: Australia and New Zealand,” European Consortium for Political Research, Montréal, Québec, 26-29 August 2015. Read more

 

A Political Science Perspective on the New Zealand Supreme Court’s Docket
“From Applications to Appeals: A Political Science Perspective on the New Zealand Supreme Court’s Docket,” Rhonda Evans Case and Sean Fern (pp. 33-60). In their contribution to this volume, Evans and Fern examine agenda-setting on the New Zealand Supreme Court for the period from ... Read more

 

Staff

Rhonda Evans
Title: Director
Institution(s): Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies

Rhonda Evans is Director of the Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where she is also a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Government. Holding both a J.D. and Ph.D., her research focuses on the politics of law and courts, with special emphasis on Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. She has published in the Australian Journal of Political Science, Congress and the Presidency, and Journal of Common Market Studies. She is also co-author of Legislating Equality: The Politics of Antidiscrimination Policy in Europe with Oxford University Press (2014).


Christine Bird
Title: Graduate Research Assistant
Institution(s): Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies

Christine Bird is a Ph.D. student in the Government Department at The University of Texas at Austin. She specializes in Public Law and American Politics. She holds a juris doctorate and a license to practice law in her home state of Oklahoma. While in law school, she completed a variety of internships including a year of service at the Oklahoma Supreme Court for Justice Tom Colbert. Additionally, she served on her law review’s board of editors. She currently serves as the Graduate Research Assistant for the Australia and New Zealand Policy Agendas Projects. Her research interests include the intersection of law and society, judicial politics, constitutional law, and civil rights.


Explore Policy Trends

The New Zealand Policy Agendas Project collects and organizes data from various archived sources to trace changes in the national policy agenda and public policy outcomes in New Zealand. Major topic data are available for Questions for Oral Answer for the 49th Parliament. Data for decisions of the New Zealand Supreme Court are forthcoming

Principal Investigator: Rhonda Evans
Location: Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
Email: clarkcenteroznz@gmail.com

Sponsoring Institutions

The New Zealand Policy Agendas Project is funded by the Edward A. Clark Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies at The University of Texas at Austin.

New Zealand Policy Agendas

Featured Research:
Policy Agendas of National Courts: Australia and New Zealand Compared

Rhonda Evans and Rebecca Eissler, “Policy Agendas of National Courts: Australia and New Zealand Compared,” 8th Annual Comparative Policy Agendas Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, 22-24 June 2015. Read more

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