Designing for equity and intergenerational wellbeing : Te Tokoturu Penny Hagen, Angie Tangaere, Sophia Beaton, Aimee Hadrup, Roimata Taniwha-Paoo and Donna Te Whiu
By: Hagen, Penny
.
Contributor(s): Tangaere, Angie
| Beaton, Sophia
| Hadrup, Aimee
| Taniwha-Paoo, Roimata
| Te Whiu, Donna
.
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON21120016 |
Innovation Brief, October 2021
The Tokotoru prevention and wellbeing model (from The Auckland Co-Design Lab and The Southern Initiative) helps us take a whānau-centred, strength-based approach to support the elimination of family violence and sexual violence. Tokotoru means ‘unbreakable three’, and outlines the three dimensions that enable and enhance wellbeing:
Strengthening: a strengths-based approach to enhancing the factors that support wellbeing and prevent harm;
Responding: holistic safe, accessible and integrated responses tailored to individuals, families, whānau and communities;
Healing: a focus on supporting recovery, redress and restoration.
The Auckland Co-Design Lab and The Southern Initiative released an Innovation Brief short report on Te Tokotoru model(external link). This report provides information about where Te Tokotoru came from, how it is being used, and how it can be applied by government agencies, communities and groups in their work towards equity and intergenerational wellbeing. (From the Joint Venture website: https://www.violencefree.govt.nz/about-us/). Record #7399