He Whare Takata : are wāhine Māori visible in Oranga Tamariki practice guidance? Kerri Cleaver
By: Cleaver, Kerri.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work.Publisher: Aotearoa New Zealand Association of Social Workers, 2024ISSN: 2463-4131.Subject(s): Oranga Tamariki, Ministry for Children | CHILD PROTECTION | COLONISATION | FAMILY LAW | HISTORY | KŌRERO NEHE | INDIGENOUS PEOPLES | IWI TAKETAKE | MANA WĀHINE | MĀORI | TAIPŪWHENUATANGA | TE AO MĀORI | TOKO I TE ORA | TURE WHĀNAU | WĀHINE | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Open access, PDF In: Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2024, 36(2): 57-67Summary: Introduction: The gauge of a society is how it responds to women and children and, in settler colonial nations, how it responds to the Indigenous women and children. This includes how society upholds the rights and responsibilities of women’s self-determination of body rights and reproductive Justice. Reproductive justice in the settler colonial environment of Aotearoa1 is tightly tied to the experiences of wāhine Māori2 and our lived realities across the colonial project. To give full rights and responsibilities to wa¯ hine as holders of whakapapa, birthing practices, and keepers of knowledge, we must be willing to assess and critique society and hold colonial systems to account. Approach: This article follows on from the companion literature analysis article “He Whare Takata: Wāhine Māori reproductive justice in the child protection system”, which provides a detailed description of pre- and post-colonial herstory, providing the reader with an extensive storying of wa¯ hine as leaders. Both articles accept a mana3 wa¯ hine foundational position that asserts the rakatirataka (leadership and self-determination) of wa¯ hine and the inherent rights of wa¯ hine as ‘he whare takata4 ’, the house of humanity. Conclusions: Drawing on the groundwork laid in the companion article, this analysis examines the Oranga Tamariki5 (OT) practice and evidence centres, specifically auditing content produced following the “Hawkes Bay Uplift”6 for evidence of a shift of practice that incorporates wa¯ hine knowing, being and doing holding to the foundation of ‘he whare takata’. (Author's abstract). Record #8754Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON24070006 |
Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2024, 36(2): 57-67
Introduction: The gauge of a society is how it responds to women and children and, in settler colonial nations, how it responds to the Indigenous women and children. This includes
how society upholds the rights and responsibilities of women’s self-determination of body rights and reproductive Justice. Reproductive justice in the settler colonial environment of Aotearoa1 is tightly tied to the experiences of wāhine Māori2 and our lived realities across the colonial project. To give full rights and responsibilities to wa¯ hine as holders of whakapapa, birthing practices, and keepers of knowledge, we must be willing to assess and critique society and hold colonial systems to account.
Approach: This article follows on from the companion literature analysis article “He Whare Takata: Wāhine Māori reproductive justice in the child protection system”, which provides a
detailed description of pre- and post-colonial herstory, providing the reader with an extensive storying of wa¯ hine as leaders. Both articles accept a mana3 wa¯ hine foundational position that asserts the rakatirataka (leadership and self-determination) of wa¯ hine and the inherent rights of
wa¯ hine as ‘he whare takata4 ’, the house of humanity.
Conclusions: Drawing on the groundwork laid in the companion article, this analysis examines the Oranga Tamariki5 (OT) practice and evidence centres, specifically auditing content produced following the “Hawkes Bay Uplift”6 for evidence of a shift of practice that incorporates wa¯ hine knowing, being and doing holding to the foundation of ‘he whare takata’. (Author's abstract). Record #8754