Precariat Māori households today : the need to reorient policy to cultivate more humane understandings of whānau in need Mohi Rua, Darrin Hodgetts, Ottilie Stolte, Delta King, Bill Cochrane, Thomas Stubbs, Rolinda Karapu, Eddie Neha, Kerry Chamberlain, Tiniwai Te Whetu, Ngahuia Te Awekotuku, Jarrod Harr and Shiloh Groot
By: Rua, Mohi.
Contributor(s): Hodgetts, Darrin | Stolte, Ottilie | King, Debra | Cochrane, Bill | Stubbs, Thomas | Karapu, Rolinda | Neha, Eddie | Chamberlain, Kerry | Te Whetu, Tiniwai | Te Awekotuku, Ngahuia | Harr, Jarrod | Groot, Shiloh.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Te Arotahi paper.Publisher: Auckland, New Zealand : Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga, 2019Description: electronic document (22 pages) ; PDF file.Subject(s): Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga | CULTURE | ECONOMIC CONDITIONS | HOMELESSNESS | MĀORI | POVERTY | SOCIAL POLICY | SOCIAL SERVICES | SOCIAL WELFARE | ĀHUATANGA PĀPORI | KAINGA KORE | RANGAHAU MĀORI | TIKANGA TUKU IHO | TOKO I TE ORA | TUAKOKA | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Click here to access online | Te Arotahi series Te Arotahi paper, 02, May 2019Summary: Aotearoa New Zealand is now the fifth most unequal economy in the OECD. To highlight the human cost of this situation, the concept of “the precariat” offers more informed and contextualised understandings of the situations of socio-economically marginalised people in Aotearoa. Significant societal and policy change is required for Māori whānau to be truly free from the cycle of precarity. (Authors' abstract). This is a paper in the Te Arotahi paper series, a series of think piece papers published by Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga (NPM) to provide research and focus to critical topic areas and issues facing Aotearoa New Zealand. Record #6284Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON19060006 |
Te Arotahi paper, 02, May 2019
Aotearoa New Zealand is now the fifth most unequal economy in the OECD. To highlight the human cost of this situation, the concept of “the precariat” offers more informed and contextualised understandings of the situations of socio-economically marginalised people in Aotearoa. Significant societal and policy change is required for Māori whānau to be truly free from the cycle of precarity. (Authors' abstract).
This is a paper in the Te Arotahi paper series, a series of think piece papers published by Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga (NPM) to provide research and focus to critical topic areas and issues facing Aotearoa New Zealand. Record #6284