Mereana Pitman - The Ngāti Kahungunu Violence-free Iwi Strategy, in the 2008 International Indigenous Research Conference Te Tatau Pounamu: The Greenstone Door: Traditional knowledge and gateways to balanced relationships, hosted by Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga.
Professor Tracey McIntosh talks about her research and focus on incarceration advancing our understanding of the enduring social injustices that undermine Māori wellbeing.
The purpose of the project is to reflect on the value of the use of the PATH planning 6 key tool in the Whānau Ora context and the contribution this has made to realising the Whānau Ora goals. Currently the tool is being used in two specific areas:
a) to assist whnau in planning for their future via Whānau Ora provider collectives
Project purpose: The project is a pilot for a larger project tracking phonological development (speech skills) in Māori for Māori speaking pre-school children. Although there is a substantial body of literature on how children develop speech sounds in English we know nothing about the developmental trajectory in Māori.
The Politics of Being Indigenous by Senator Clayton Hee, Chairs the Committee on Water, Land, Agriculture and Hawaiian Affairs of the Hawai‘i State Senate,in the 2010 International Indigenous Research Conference hosted by Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga.
This study on the nature of privilege sheds light on how those with the least advantage are positioned to seem as though they are receiving ‘special benefits’, while unearned advantages that accrue to the privileged remain invisible and unscrutinised, particularly by those that benefit the most from them.