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Korikori Kōrero : a mobile method of inquiry for moving Māori women and their knowledges Debora Heke

By: Heke, Deborah.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2023Subject(s): MANA WAHINE | MĀORI | RANGAHAU MĀORI | RESEARCH METHODS | UIUITANGA | WOMEN | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/1177083X.2023.2177176 (Open access) In: Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online, 2023, First published online, 15 February 2023Summary: This article outlines the use of a novel research method, Korikori Kōrero, with a group of physically active Māori women. The research aimed to identify common traits or ways of knowing and being, by engaging with Māori women in their chosen physical activities and preferred environments. Korikori Kōrero draws from both Indigenous and Euro-Western research methodologies to ultimately bring the research relationship and associated power dynamic into balance. Māori women have experienced an exaggerated imbalance of power resulting from the patriarchal dominance of colonisation, and their contemporary realities often reflect this. However, it was the intention of this research and method, to privilege the stories of Māori women, successful in navigating contemporary realities – through physical activity, a known protective health behaviour. This article will share the rationale behind this novel mobile method; how it was implemented; and its relevance in generating an understanding of physically active Māori women. (Author's abstract). Record #8031
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Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online, 2023, First published online, 15 February 2023

This article outlines the use of a novel research method, Korikori Kōrero, with a group of physically active Māori women. The research aimed to identify common traits or ways of knowing and being, by engaging with Māori women in their chosen physical activities and preferred environments. Korikori Kōrero draws from both Indigenous and Euro-Western research methodologies to ultimately bring the research relationship and associated power dynamic into balance. Māori women have experienced an exaggerated imbalance of power resulting from the patriarchal dominance of colonisation, and their contemporary realities often reflect this. However, it was the intention of this research and method, to privilege the stories of Māori women, successful in navigating contemporary realities – through physical activity, a known protective health behaviour. This article will share the rationale behind this novel mobile method; how it was implemented; and its relevance in generating an understanding of physically active Māori women. (Author's abstract). Record #8031