Spelling suggestions: "subject:"mātauranga māori"" "subject:"mātauranga ecori""
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The Price of Mauri: Exploring the validity of Welfare Economics when seeking to measure Mātauranga MāoriAwatere, Shaun January 2008 (has links)
Since the 1980s New Zealand has pursued neo-classical or market-based policies with a particular fervour. Market-based options are seen by resource management decision makers as essential frameworks for efficiently allocating resources, an approach that continues to support the view of the inherent dominance of Western knowledge. This is particularly concerning, given that Māori (the indigenous people of New Zealand), have an important role to play in New Zealand resource management and perceive their own knowledge systems have been marginalised. The primary goal of this thesis is to explore the validity of welfare economics when seeking to measure quantitatively Mātauranga Māori or Māori views of the environment through the contingent valuation method. A contingent valuation study is carried out using three separate samples drawn from the general Māori population in Auckland city, a hāpu/sub-tribe indigenous to the Auckland isthmus, and drivers of motor vehicles in Auckland city. Data collection modes include a postal survey and face-to-face interviews. This thesis challenges the validity of political-legal ethnicity constructs to measure Mātauranga Māori. The search for a central tendency will lead to biased, misleading and inaccurate results. The thesis also challenges the validity of contingent valuation to produce true economic measures and to measure and identify Mātauranga Māori. Despite advances in analytical techniques, economic efficiency measures are always deficient, given the difficulty of capturing and anticipating all impacts and valuing them appropriately. Mātauranga Māori is derived from a Māori epistemology and should be considered or analysed with primary reference to this body of knowledge. Economic analysis is only one important cog in the machinery of resource management policy. Given that an economist's contribution to local and regional resource management is most valuable when focusing on the economic efficiency of the proposed resource allocation, it is appropriate that other perspectives such as Mātauranga Māori be considered.
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Atuatanga: Holding Te Karaitianatanga and Te Māoritanga Together Going Forward.Hollis, Jubilee Turi January 2013 (has links)
This thesis sets out to provide the background to the development of Atuatanga and to clarify its meaning and its whakapapa in Te Māoritanga and Te Karaitianatanga. Although it has been taught as Māori theology in Tikanga Māori of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia, this thesis argues that is includes theology and more: it is a way of living that critically analyses all the attributes of te Atua and endeavours to live those reflections in the world in order
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Conceptualising Wairuatanga: Rituals, Relevance and Realities for teachersFoster, Winnie Gipsy January 2009 (has links)
This research project was based on the complexities and conceptualising forms of
wairuatanga and their implications for teaching and learning in New Zealand mainstream
schools. As a relatively new study for research the project explored wairuatanga through the life
and work experiences of three Māori teachers from education centres around New Zealand.
Wairuatanga permeated through the life and teaching of the participants who all expressed their
own sense of wairuatanga in different ways. The cognisance of mātauranga Māori, tikanga
Māori and insights into te ao Māori were identified and explored thus taking into account the
various ways in which the three participants extended the parameters of existing knowledge of
wairuatanga and how they promoted and created a climate within their own teaching context that
fostered the natural inclusion of wairuatanga. The findings will assist current teachers and
others to develop an understanding and appreciation of the different forms of wairuatanga that
may assist them to apply this value to their own classroom practice. It is hoped that the findings
will also help to inform teaching practices with respect to teaching and learning not only for
Māori children but for all children in New Zealand mainstream schools.
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