Search our Kete Mātauranga for over 20 years of rangahau including projects, videos, e-panui, publications, policy papers, and reports.

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  • 2012 Seminars

    This seminar will discuss the methodologies, ethics, processes and procedures encountered in using new and emerging technologies to develop databases of Māori taonga in overseas museums, the digital repatriation of taonga and the creation of digital libraries of mātauranga Māori.

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  • 2012 Seminars

    This seminar will discuss the methodologies, ethics, processes and procedures encountered in using new and emerging technologies to develop databases of Māori taonga in overseas museums, the digital repatriation of taonga and the creation of digital libraries of mātauranga Māori.

    Read more

  • The purpose of this project is to determine if Kahawai (Arripis trutta) in fact enter rivers during summer to spawn. Located in the field in the Eastern Bay of Plenty as well as at Victoria University the intern will conduct field observations and water sampling, and also collect Kahawai from the river to determine their sex and reproductive stage. The intern will learn to conduct hapū initiated kaupapa Māori research that takes a transdiciplinary approach, using methods from multiple disciplines to inform hapū research questions.

    Project commenced:
  • Drawing from the Indigenous Australian context, this paper reflects upon the theme of ‘Indigenous human flourishing’ and the (in)capabilities of the academy to see us as both human and healthy. It takes as its focus the Indigenous scholar, not as student but as activist, and considers the necessary weaponry for recovering and reclaiming our humanity and what it is to be healthy.

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  • 2018 Conference

    "To  be  healthy  and  human:  Making  the  case  for  an  Indigenist  health   humanities" by Dr Chelsea Bond (Aboriginal Munanjahli and South Sea Islander Australian) Senior Lecturer with the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit, University of Queensland, Keynote Speaker, Mauri Ora, Indigenous Human Flourishing.

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  • “I think all New Zealanders pride ourselves on being clean and green, but we are increasingly asking what we need to do to protect that…” When winning support from local authorities, these days it’s the numbers that talk. And as a scientist with Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research based at Lincoln near Christchurch, Dr James Ataria has been using them eloquently for some time in collaborative research projects helping local communities protect culturally significant environments.