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Te Tumu Research
Research at Otago in Māori, Pacific, and Indigenous Studies

Exciting Opportunity for PACI student.

We are happy to announce a major success for Eden Iati of the PACI201 class (Tagata Pasifika: Peoples of Oceania).

Eden has been selected by the McGuiness Foundation to participate in a 72 hour workshop in Wellington in December on TacklingPovertyNZ: Exploring ways to reduce poverty in New Zealand.

The course will bring together 30 young New Zealanders who will work together to prepare a youth perspective on poverty in Aotearoa New Zealand, and how to tackle it. Those selected will be engaging with government ministers, Treasury, Auckland City Mission, Economic think tanks and many others.

PACI201, a paper within Te Tumu’s Pacific Islands Studies major, proved to be an excellent support to Eden as it examines issues such as poverty, inequality, urbanisation and land in a Pacific context.

Well done Eden!

“How whakapapa saved my life”

KParingatai200pxDr Karyn Paringatai (Ngāti Porou) is perhaps best known for her innovative award-winning teaching pedagogy – teaching in the dark.  But on 10 November, Karyn gave a talk for TEDxDunedin on a much more personal issue, on how learning her whakapapa saved her life.  TEDx talks are about “Ideas Worth Spreading”.

Click here to watch the video of Karyn’s talk.

Karyn teaches Māori language and performing arts in Te Tumu.

 

Emma Dunlop-Bennett, a new PhD student in Pacific Studies.

Emma Dunlop-Bennett, a new PhD student in Pacific Studies, visited from Wellington recently. Emma is supervised by AP Jenny Bryant-Tokalau and Dr Michelle Schaaf, and her topic is ‘Strengthening Pasifika early childhood education through a Pasifika-developed model’.

Emma’s working background is as Country Director of World Vision Vanuatu, and as Programme Manager in NZAID and MFAT, largely in the Pacific. She has also worked in the Family Planning Association (NZ), and in Rural Development in Zimbabwe. Emma will be based in Wellington but will visit Te Tumu several times a year.

Tangata Whenua Internship at Waikato Museum

Mō ngā tauira…   Kei te kimi te Whare Taonga o Waikato i tētahi tangata hei kaimahi āwhina mō ngā taonga Māori.  He pai tēnei momo mahi hei kaupae tuatahi o tō ara mahi, rangahau rānei.  Tirohia te pānuitanga, kia kitea he pai rānei tēnei tūranga mōu.

 

Seminar on Fijian Politics

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Dr Alumita Durutalo’s seminar on “The Politics of Security and Insecurity in Fiji” has been rescheduled.  This will now be held 2.30pm, 28 October, in CEN3, in the Central Library.

“Testing te reo”

Check out Poia Rewi’s research on the revitalization of te reo Māori in this extended article in the latest issue of the Otago Bulletin.

Success at the Ngā Kupu Ora Book Awards

I te Rāmere nei i tū ai Ngā Kupu Ora Book Awards, ā kei Te Hua o Te Reo Māori te wini mō te paraihe ReoHe mea ētita tēnei pukapuka e Ahorangi Rāwinia Higgins (he kaiako ia nō Te Tumu i ngā rā o mua) rātou ko Ahorangi Tuarua Poia Rewi (koia te Tīni o Te Tumu ināianei) ko Vincent Olsen-Reeder.

The Ngā Kupu Ora Book Awards were held on Friday.  The Value of the Māori Language: Te Hua o Te Reo Māori, co-edited by former Te Tumu staff member Associate Professor Rāwinia Higgins, current Te Tumu Dean Associate Professor Poia Rewi, and Vincent Olsen-Reeder, took out the Te Reo prize.

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Kua riro anō i a Poia Rewi he paraihe mō āna mahi whakaputa pukapuka.

He pukapuka tēnei “that aims to engage and reawaken Māori consciousness on the value of Māori language won the Te Reo prize.  The Value of the Māori Language: Te Hua o Te Reo Māori draws on research from more than 30 contributors about the value of the Māori language and their aspirations for its future direction.” Click here for more details of the awards.

He mihi nunui ki ngā ētita, ki ngā kaituhi hoki o ngā pukapuka i toa, ā, ki ngā pukapuka katoa e whakatairanga ana i te kaupapa o te mātauranga Māori.

Te Tumu and the Ngā Kupu Ora Aotearoa Māori Book Awards

Two publications involving Te Tumu staff feature in the “Te Reo Māori” section of this year’s  Ngā Kupu Ora Aotearoa Māori Book Awards, an annual event that has been honouring excellence in Māori writing since 2009.  The 2015 event will be held on Thursday evening, 10 September at Te Marae, Te Papa Tongarewa in Wellington, with 15 finalists competing in 6 categories.

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Rawinia Higgins, Poia Rewi and Vincent Olsen-Reeder, The value of the Māori Language: Te Hua o te Reo Māori (Wellington: Huia, 2014).  Associate Professor Poia Rewi is currently the Dean of Te Tumu and Professor Rawinia Higgins, a former Te Tumu staff member (now the Head of Te Kawa a Māui, Victoria University), co-edited this volume and co-wrote a chapter on their ZePA model for language revitalization.  Also featured are chapters from former Te Tumu staff member, Hana O’Regan, and Katharina Ruckstuhl, a former Te Tumu student and Senior Research Analyst at the Research and Enterprise Office of the University of Otago.

MarangaMerata Kawharu, Maranga mai! Te Reo and marae in crisis? (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2014). Associate Professor Merata Kawharu, an adjunct member of Te Tumu, edited this collection from a number of eminent scholars on the state of te reo Māori and the participation of Māori in marae activities.

We wish both Merata and Poia the best of luck in these Awards.

Te Tumu Seminar

Dr. Victoria Mason (School of Politics and International Relations, ANU) will be giving the next Te Tumu seminar on  3pm, Wednesday 9 September in R3S10 (Te Iringa Kōrero, Te Tumu)

Title: ‘Planned misery’: Oslo, aid, and the human rights industry in Palestine

An afternoon tea will follow the seminar.

Abstract:  Despite a plethora of human rights initiatives, conflict resolution attempts, and considerable international humanitarian and development funding, the international community has not only been unable to bring about meaningful resolution of the Palestinian question, but has, ironically, compounded the situation facing Palestinians. This paper posits that these failures result from the international community dealing with Palestinian rights in a ritualistic and perfunctory way.

Presenter biography: Dr. Victoria Mason is a Lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University in Canberra. Her research focuses on human rights issues and peace and conflict studies. Within these fields she works on a number of areas including Palestinian human rights, the wider Israel-Palestine conflict, human rights in peace processes, refugees in the Middle East and Islamophobia.

 

Matani Schaaf Seminar

Matani Schaaf, who has just submitted his PhD thesis, will be presenting the next Te Tumu seminar on “What Was/Is the Participation Motivation of Elite Pasifiki Rugby Players?”

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This will be held in CEN3, (Central Library) at 3pm, Wednesday 12 August.  All interested people are welcome.  Click on the image below for more details.