This thesis contributes to scholarship documenting the social harms of Māori hyperincarceration by drawing attention to the impact on an often-overlooked group: Māori employed in frontline roles in prison settings. Based on semi-structured interviews with eight Māori former prison officers, including my own father, the project found frontline staff experiencing feelings of isolation and constraints, cultural violence, and exposure to traumatic events – with adversities having ripple effects on officers’ whānau. Despite attempts from consecutive governments to biculturalise the prison system, Māori prison officers experienced these changes as largely tokenistic, and their well-being continues to be undermin...