- 22-23INT07
Internship project
Project commenced:Rautaki WhakaaweawePātai PuāwaiProject supervisor: Associate Professor Bridgette Masters-Awatere & Dr Amohia Boulton
Institution: Whakauae Research
Raumati intern: Grace Manihera (Ngaati Wairere, Ngaati Mahuta)
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Communiqué
Project commenced:Project completedThis communiqué was developed by the Indigenous Data Sovereignty Collab held at the 10th International Indigenous Research Conference (IIRC22), 15-18 November 2022. Hosted by Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga Centre of Research Excellence, IIRC has a well established reputation as a premiere international Indigenous conference.
- 22PHD08
Doctoral Thesis
Project commenced:Project completedPae TawhitiPātai PuāwaiPhD Candidate: Jennifer Tokomauri McGregor (Ngati Raukawa (Waikato))
Primary Supervisor(s): Dr. Alayne Mikahere-Hall
- 22MR01
Matakitenga project
Project commenced:Project completedPae OraPātai WhānauMāori youth are over-represented in the negative indices for youth court apprehensions (8.3 times higher than non-Māori) (Ministry of Justice, 2020). Despite this, there is a dearth of research about the experiences of rangatahi Māori who offend, and their whānau (Suaalii-Sauni, Tauri & Webb, 2018).This project builds on recent PhD findings (Cliffe-Tautari, 2021) which indicated that Māori youth who offend, and their whānau, experience considerable trauma in their lives prior to, and during the times of rangatahi’ offending; including trauma resulting from state intervention into their lives.
- 22PHD18
Doctoral Thesis
Project commenced:Project completedPae AuahaPātai WhānauPhD Candidate: Ella Ruth Newbold (Waikato, Ngāti Porou)
Primary Supervisor(s): Professor Tahu Kukutai
- 22MR13
Matakitenga project
Project commenced:Project completedPae OraPātai Te Ao MāoriToiora, Hauora is a Kaupapa Māori arts-based collaboration to theorise the pedagogy of Māori creative practices that support flourishing Māori whānau wellbeing. This innovative research centres Māori arts-based practice ‘as teacher’, bringing together three established Māori arts scholar-practitioners to expand the currently under-researched field of Māori pedagogies, and to highlight the critical role of Māori arts practice and pedagogy to grow well and flourishing Māori futures.
- 22MR03
Matakitenga project
Project commenced:Project completedPae OraPātai MauriTeachers are increasingly tasked with acknowledging their racial biases and the resulting impacts on their students’ learning and wellbeing. However, anti-bias trainings are typically generalised learning experiences with little effect. Through focus groups with Māori students in Northland schools, this project will identify common incidents of racism.
- 22MR16
Matakitenga project
Project commenced:Project completedPae AhureiPātai Te Ao MāoriNgaati Koroki Kahukura are kaitiaki of lands and waters that span from their ancestral mountain, Maungatautari, to their tupuna awa, Waikato, including areas of national significance such as Cambridge (Te Oko Horoi a Taawhiao) and Karaapiro, the site of the last intra-iwi battle of Taumata Wiiwii in the 1800s.
- 22MR15
Matakitenga project
Project commenced:Project completedPae OraPātai Te Ao MāoriIndigenous people will be more severely affected by global climate change than other populations. Despite increasing awareness of these inequities, national and global responses to climate change often fail to address issues of specific concern to Indigenous peoples and tend to overlook the potential contribution of Indigenous knowledges. Indigenous peoples’ knowledges are based on holistic and interdependent understandings of the environment and have the potential to inform action towards climate transformation.
- 22MR06
Matakitenga project
Project commenced:Project completedPae AhureiPātai Te Ao MāoriKai piro was traditionally a staple component of the Māori diet. However, over time and due to post-european contact, the practice of sourcing, processing, and consumption of kai piro has lessened to the degree in which it is no longer part of the common Māori diet today. The practice of kai piro is maintained today by remnants of an ageing Māori population.