Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://superindex.lbr.auckland.ac.nz/handle/123456789/197326
Title: Pākehā 'Paralysis': Cultural Safety for Those Researching the General Population of Aotearoa
Issue Date: 2002
Publisher: 
Description: Tolich explores what he calls ‘Pākehā paralysis’ – the uncertainty that many non-Māori postgraduate students encounter in researching the general population of Aotearoa New Zealand, which often results in their deliberately excluding Māori from their research. He argues that this exclusion constitutes a harm and violates the Treaty of Waitangi. He then explores the causes of this paralysis, which he relates to ‘the emergence and dominance of the Māori-centred research paradigm [Kaupapa Māori]’, and explains that rather than guiding them through this paralysis, research ethics guidelines and supervisors often fail to provide helpful advice. He suggests that the Nursing Council of New Zealand’s Guidelines for Cultural Safety could be adapted for research, and thus provide effective guidance.
URI: http://superindex.lbr.auckland.ac.nz//handle/123456789/197326
ISSN: 1172-4382
Appears in Collections:Kaupapa Māori

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