Kaupapa Maori research developed as part of a broader movement by Maori to question westernized notions of knowledge, culture, and research. Kaupapa Maori research has been used as both a form of resistance and a methodological strategy, wherein research is conceived, developed, and carried out by Maori, and the end outcome is to benefit Maori. This piece reviews the development and main principles of kaupapa Maori research, and it also describes and critiques the main processes of kaupapa Maori research. Three exemplars of research carried out by Maori researchers are provided to illustrate these principles and processes. We conclude that kaupapa Maori research is a relevant approach for research involving Maori and that it can enhance the...
This thesis explores the ways that colonisation has resulted in Maori being cast as different and t...
The aim of this report is to seek conceptual clarification of 'Maori tourism', 'Maori tourism busine...
In Aotearoa New Zealand, the precariat is populated by at least one in six New Zealanders, with Māor...
Kaupapa Maori research developed as part of a broader movement by Maori to question westernized noti...
This paper seeks to identify how issues of epistemological racism are addressed in practice within ...
Maori aspirations for a better future are inextricably linked to their health and well-being. Resear...
Serious concerns about research involving Maori people have been raised by Walker (1979), Curtis (19...
This thesis seeks to acknowledge and address the concerns that Maori people voice about research int...
This paper is a culmination of common understandings that were elicited from two pieces of research:...
Maori people have a unique body of knowledge that, while based on ancestral traditions, has adapted ...
Although ‘research’ and ‘researchers’ feature prominently socially and politically a lot of people d...
The following is a reflective commentary on the place of Critical Indigenous Studies, with a focus o...
There is little knowledge of Maori peoples' leisure understandings, experiences and participation. T...
The health of the environment is integral to the health and wellbeing of the people. When the balan...
The aim of the Te Mata Ira project was to explore Maori views on biobanking and genomic research, an...
This thesis explores the ways that colonisation has resulted in Maori being cast as different and t...
The aim of this report is to seek conceptual clarification of 'Maori tourism', 'Maori tourism busine...
In Aotearoa New Zealand, the precariat is populated by at least one in six New Zealanders, with Māor...
Kaupapa Maori research developed as part of a broader movement by Maori to question westernized noti...
This paper seeks to identify how issues of epistemological racism are addressed in practice within ...
Maori aspirations for a better future are inextricably linked to their health and well-being. Resear...
Serious concerns about research involving Maori people have been raised by Walker (1979), Curtis (19...
This thesis seeks to acknowledge and address the concerns that Maori people voice about research int...
This paper is a culmination of common understandings that were elicited from two pieces of research:...
Maori people have a unique body of knowledge that, while based on ancestral traditions, has adapted ...
Although ‘research’ and ‘researchers’ feature prominently socially and politically a lot of people d...
The following is a reflective commentary on the place of Critical Indigenous Studies, with a focus o...
There is little knowledge of Maori peoples' leisure understandings, experiences and participation. T...
The health of the environment is integral to the health and wellbeing of the people. When the balan...
The aim of the Te Mata Ira project was to explore Maori views on biobanking and genomic research, an...
This thesis explores the ways that colonisation has resulted in Maori being cast as different and t...
The aim of this report is to seek conceptual clarification of 'Maori tourism', 'Maori tourism busine...
In Aotearoa New Zealand, the precariat is populated by at least one in six New Zealanders, with Māor...