Prue Hyman | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Born | Prudence Janet Hyman 23 March 1943 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Academic background | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alma mater | University of Oxford | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Academic work | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discipline | feminism,economics,special education | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Institutions | Victoria University of Wellington | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Doctoral students | Alice Pollard [1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cricket information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Batting | Right-handed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Right-arm off-break | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Role | Batter | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Domestic team information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years | Team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1969/70–1983/84 | Wellington | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career statistics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source:CricketArchive,15 September 2023 |
Prudence Janet Hyman (born 23 March 1943) is a New Zealand feminist economist and former cricketer. She was associate professor of economics and gender and women's studies at Victoria University of Wellington [2] until controversial [3] restructuring between 2008 and 2010 abolished Gender and Women's Studies. [4] [5] During the 2023 New Zealand general election,Hyman stood as a candidate for the Women's Rights Party's. [6]
Hyman earned a Master of Arts degree at the University of Oxford. [7] While a student there in the 1960s,she was barred from joining the Oxford Union,and so campaigned for women to be allowed to join the society. The campaign was successful,and Hyman was one of the first women to serve on the Oxford Union's Standing Committee. [8]
After graduating from Oxford University,Hyman worked as a statistician before emigrating to New Zealand in 1969 to work at Victoria University of Wellington. At Victoria,she was involved in the Women's Studies at the university and the Women's Studies Association. Hyman became a feminist and her research focues on the links between ethnic,class and gender discrimination. [9]
Hyman studied the personal aspects of economics rather than the typical corporate or governmental aspects and is frequently called on by the popular press on issues such as living wages [10] [11] [12] [13] and pay equity [14] [15] on which she has published widely and makes the case for the disadvantaged:[o]rthodox economics wildly exaggerates the productivity justifications for such wide differences [between the wealthy and the poor]. Top people essentially pay themselves and each other what they can get away with while squeezing those at the bottom. [16] She was a founding member of,and remains a significant contributor to,the Labour,Employment and Work in New Zealand conferences at Victoria. [17]
Hyman's 2000 report into the culture of the New Zealand Police,commissioned by the police themselves,has been cited as a major driver for change within the force. [18] [19] [20]
Hyman eventually rose to become an associate professor of economics and gender and women's studies at Victoria University. [2] She resigned after the University dissolved its gender and women's studies programme during a controversial restructuring between 2008 and 2010. [4] [5]
During the 2023 New Zealand general election,Hyman was ranked fifth on the Women's Rights Party's party list. [6] She has criticised the transgender movement for allegedly encroaching on female spaces and replacing gender with sex as a classifying variable. [21] During the 2023 election,the Women's Rights Party gained 2,513 votes (0.08%) of the party vote and did not win any seats. [22]
Hyman is an out lesbian [23] and dog-owner. [24] She is also of Jewish descent. [9] Hyman played cricket for Middlesex Women Second XI from 1961 to 1965,and subsequently for Wellington Women. [25]
Victoria University of Wellington is a public research university in Wellington, New Zealand. It was established in 1897 by Act of Parliament, and was a constituent college of the University of New Zealand.
Georgina Beyer was a New Zealand Labour Party politician who represented Wairarapa in the Parliament of New Zealand from 1999 to 2005, after serving as mayor of Carterton from 1995 to 1999. Beyer was the world's first openly transgender mayor, and the world's first openly transgender member of parliament. As a member of the Labour Party Beyer supported progressive policies including prostitution law reform, civil unions, anti-discrimination laws, and the promotion of Māori rights. She resigned in 2007, and, in 2014, unsuccessfully stood for election on behalf of the Mana Party.
Dame Marilyn Joy Waring is a New Zealand public policy scholar, international development consultant, former politician, environmentalist, feminist and a principal founder of feminist economics.
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Phillida Bunkle is a former New Zealand politician. She represented the Alliance in Parliament from 1996 to 2002, when she retired. Bunkle was for many years a lecturer at Victoria University.
Maryan Street is a New Zealand unionist, academic and former politician. She was president of the New Zealand Labour Party from 1993 to 1995 and a Labour Party list member of the New Zealand House of Representatives from 2005 until 2014.
Jill Annette Ovens is a New Zealand trade unionist, politician, and anti-transgender rights activist. She is the founder and current National Secretary of the Women's Rights Party.
New Zealand society is generally accepting of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) peoples. The LGBTQ-friendly environment is epitomised by the fact that there are several members of Parliament who belong to the LGBTQ community, LGBTQ rights are protected by the Human Rights Act, and same-sex couples are able to marry as of 2013. Sex between men was decriminalised in 1986. New Zealand has an active LGBTQ community, with well-attended annual gay pride festivals in most cities.
Women's suffrage was an important political issue in the late-nineteenth-century New Zealand. In early colonial New Zealand, as in European societies, women were excluded from any involvement in politics. Public opinion began to change in the latter half of the nineteenth century and after years of effort by women's suffrage campaigners, led by Kate Sheppard, New Zealand became the first nation in the world in which all women had the right to vote in parliamentary elections.
Celia Margaret Wade-Brown is a New Zealand politician who has been a Green Party list MP since 19 January 2024. She previously served as the 34th mayor of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand, from 2010 until 2016.
Julie Anne Genter is an American-born New Zealand politician who is a member of the House of Representatives representing the Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand. Genter was elected to each Parliament from 2011 to 2023 on the party lists, before being elected as the Member of Parliament for the Rongotai electorate in the 2023 election. She served as the Minister for Women, Associate Minister for Health and Associate Minister for Transport during the first term of the Sixth Labour Government. She holds dual citizenship of New Zealand and the United States.
Margunn Bjørnholt is a Norwegian sociologist and economist. She is a research professor at the Norwegian Centre for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies (NKVTS) and a professor of sociology at the University of Bergen. Her research has focused on financial institutions, management and working life and later on gender equality, migration and violence. She has also worked as a consultant, a civil servant, served as an expert to the European Commission and been president of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights.
Priyanca Radhakrishnan is a New Zealand politician who has been elected to the New Zealand parliament since the 2017 general election as a representative of the New Zealand Labour Party and was Minister for the Community and Voluntary Sector from 2020 to 2023.
Patricia Jean Rosier was a New Zealand writer, editor and feminist activist. Born and educated in Auckland into a working-class family, after marriage and raising two children she came out as a lesbian in the 1980s and went on to play a leading role in the second wave of New Zealand's Women's Movement, including editing Broadsheet for six years. In her later years she lived with Prue Hyman in Paekākāriki, north of Wellington.
Dr. Alice Aruhe'eta Pollard is a women's rights and peace advocate from the Solomon Islands.
Elizabeth Anne Kerekere is a New Zealand politician and LGBTQ activist and scholar. She was elected a member of parliament for the Green Party in 2020, but resigned from the Greens on 5 May 2023, following allegations of bullying within the party. Kerekere remained in parliament as an independent until the 2023 election.
Campbell Nicholas Barry is a New Zealand politician. He has served as Mayor of Lower Hutt since 2019.
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Brooke Olivia van Velden is a New Zealand politician who has served as the deputy leader of ACT New Zealand since June 2020. She has been a member of Parliament (MP) since the 2020 general election, first as a list MP and, since 2023, the MP for Tāmaki. Van Velden currently serves in the National-led government as the 38th minister of internal affairs and 6th minister for workplace relations and safety. She is the second youngest cabinet minister in New Zealand history, being just eight days older than Phil Goff was when he became Minister of Housing after the 1984 election.
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