Authors
Helen Moewaka Barnes, Tim McCreanor
Publication date
2019/11/29
Journal
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
Volume
49
Issue
sup1
Pages
19-33
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Colonisation has deeply harmed Maori communities, seriously and consistently undermining their vitality, aspirations and potentials, particularly since the 1860s, at inestimable cost to the entire nation. The British arrival in Aotearoa commenced a relationship between two very different peoples that has profoundly influenced their distinct and collective fortunes ever since. Despite manifest breaches of te Tiriti o Waitangi, this relationship has centred settler interests ensuring that Maori sovereignty has been displaced in favour of colonial hegemony, entrenching longstanding, preventable inequities in health and other important domains of social life. In this paper we trace some broad indicators of relational health and wellbeing in Aotearoa and consider how Maori thinking about whenua, health and wellbeing might lead healing opportunities for people and whenua. We outline ways in which a unified, dynamic …
Total citations
20192020202120222023202411939887930
Scholar articles
H Moewaka Barnes, T McCreanor - Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 2019