Binney was born in
Australia in 1940, the daughter of Sydney Musgrove, who was appointed professor of English at
Auckland University College in 1947. She graduated with a first-class honours degree in history from the
University of Auckland in 1965, and started work at the university as a lecturer in the History Department the next year. She retired as professor of history in 2004. She wrote biographies of both Te Kooti and Kenana, as well as a book on Kenana's followers, and another on missionary
Thomas Kendall. With Judith Bassett and
Erik Olssen she wrote
People and the Land, a history of New Zealand aimed at readers of high-school level. For services to historical research, she was appointed a
Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the
1997 New Year Honours. In the
2006 New Year Honours, she was promoted to Distinguished Companion of the same order. In
2009 she accepted redesignation as a
Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, following the restoration of titular honours by the New Zealand government. In 1998 she was made a Fellow of the
Royal Society of New Zealand. She was awarded a three-year
James Cook Research Fellowship in 1999 for research on the history of Urewera. She was awarded $60,000 at the
Prime Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement in 2006. Prime Minister of New Zealand
Helen Clark stated: "Judith Binney’s work plays a vital role in recording our history, with a focus on Māori communities. Her writing draws on oral histories and communal memories, and uses photographic sources as an integral part of the written historical discourse." In 2007, Binney was named an inaugural fellow of the New Zealand Academy of Humanities, and she was a historical consultant for
Vincent Ward's film,
Rain of the Children (2008). In 2010, she won the
New Zealand Post Book of the Year and General Non-fiction Award for
Encircled Lands: Te Urewera, 1820–1921 (Bridget Williams Books). The book documents Tūhoe's quest for self-government of their lands, granted to them in law more than a century ago. Binney was married twice: to painter
Don Binney, and later to fellow academic Sebastian Black (1937–2015). ==Death==