Authors
Cinnamon Lindsay Latimer, Jade Le Grice, Logan Hamley, Lara Greaves, Ashlea Gillon, Shiloh Groot, Madhavi Manchi, Larissa Renfrew, Terryann C Clark
Publication date
2022/7/3
Journal
Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online
Volume
17
Issue
3
Pages
298-312
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Persistent health inequities between rangatahi Māori (Indigenous young people) and other young people within Aotearoa New Zealand are incurred by a colonial machinery of institutions, service systems and sociocultural contexts that facilitates the marginalisation of Māori. Despite a skilled and dedicated Māori workforce, current service contexts severely limit the innovation of Māori practitioners working from a basis of mātauranga Māori (Māori ways of knowing and being), and curtail their ability to support rangatahi Māori and their whānau (community of related families). We report on an interview study with 13 Māori practitioners in youth development, exploring their struggles, strengths and strategies, as part of a larger project exploring rangatahi wellbeing and whanaungatanga (connectedness and relationality). Utilising reflexive thematic analysis, we describe three conceptual domains that participant accounts …
Total citations
2022202320241157
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