The woven self: An auto-ethnography of cultural disruption and connectedness

P King - International Perspectives in Psychology, 2019 - econtent.hogrefe.com
This current auto-ethnographic study is set against the backdrop of colonial policies of
urbanization and cultural assimilation that continue to impact the everyday lives of Māāori …

Creation narratives as metaphors for Indigenous identity development: The Pōwhiri identity negotiation framework

A Rata, JH Liu, J Hutchings - Psychology and Developing …, 2014 - journals.sagepub.com
Indigenous peoples in the 21st century colonial contexts face many challenges, not least of
which is the struggle to retain cultural identity, beliefs, knowledge and traditions. While …

Constructing identity spaces for First Nations people: Towards an indigenous psychology of self-determination and cultural healing

JH Liu, KLT Aho, A Rata - Psychology and Developing …, 2014 - journals.sagepub.com
Indigenous psychology as a global movement includes First Nations people who were
colonised and live today as minorities amidst European majorities in their homelands. This …

Decolonizing conviviality and 'becoming ordinary': Cross-cultural face-to-face encounters in Aotearoa New Zealand

A Bell - Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2016 - Taylor & Francis
This paper explores convivial culture in a settler society. The paper draws on interview data
from ethnographic research exploring how Māori and Pākehā worked together on a building …

Decolonizing methodologies to counter 'minority'spaces

S Mlcek - Continuum, 2017 - Taylor & Francis
Māori living in Āotearoa New Zealand are strongly connected to their communities, through
woven threads of genealogy [whakapapa], spirituality [wairua], language regeneration [Te …

Transformations in Māori women's identity: Some things change, some stay the same

CA Houkamau - Qualitative Research in Psychology, 2011 - Taylor & Francis
While Māori (the indigenous people of New Zealand) retain a strong collective identity,
cultural heterogeneity renders traditional conceptualisations of Māori identity increasingly …

Decoloniality in being Māori and community psychologists: Advancing an evolving and culturally-situated approach

M Rua, S Groot, D Hodgetts, LW Nikora… - … and epistemic justice in …, 2021 - Springer
In various enclaves around the world, psychology is being indigenised. The Ruling
psychology of our times that was first developed in Germany and exported in a simplified …

When the marae moves into the city: Being Māori in urban Palmerston North

P King, D Hodgetts, M Rua, M Morgan - City & Community, 2018 - journals.sagepub.com
Through processes of colonization, many indigenous peoples have become absorbed into
settler societies and new ways of existing within urban environments. Settler society …

Black Rainbow: Stories of Māori and Pākehā working across difference

R Fabish - 2014 - openaccess.wgtn.ac.nz
This thesis examines the impacts of colonialism on the interpersonal experiences of Māori
(indigenes) and Pākehā (settlers) involved in anarchist organising in Wellington, Aotearoa …

[HTML][HTML] E hoki mai nei ki te ūkaipō—Return to Your Place of Spiritual and Physical Nourishment

A Boulton, T Allport, H Kaiwai, G Potaka Osborne… - Genealogy, 2021 - mdpi.com
This paper presents the findings of the Perceptions of Papakāinga project, which explores
the connection between place, genealogy, and identity for two Māori (New Zealand's …