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Challenges to psychology in Aotearoa

Abstract
Maori people are putting up with a lot right now. If governments can transfer $20 billion in the past ten years for hand outs and write offs to Pakeha people who have endured little, then they can do a lot better than the $150 million they’ve transferred to our people that have endured so much for 150 years. The big issue is still the Treaty, and the need to re-negotiate this nation’s management. The challenge is to design a political system that is based on Maori ways of doing things rather than Pakeha ways of doing things. To achieve this requires relinquishing colonial patterns of thinking and the certainty that pakeha people and their ways are superior to Maori. For psychologists the issue is their role in maintaining Pakeha economic and political power. It may well be that psychologists provide lousy value for money from the Maori point of view, but provide excellent value for money from the government’s point of view.
Type
Conference Contribution
Type of thesis
Series
Cultural Justice and Ethics Symposium 1993
Citation
Awatere-Huata, D. (Ed.). (1993). Challenges to psychology in Aotearoa. In Nikora, L.W. (Ed.) Cultural Justice and Ethics. Proceedings of a symposium held at the Annual Conference of the New Zealand Psychological Society, University of Victoria, Wellington, 23-24 August 1993. (pp. 12-19).
Date
1993
Publisher
Psychology Department, University of Waikato
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
Copyright © 1993 National Standing Committee on Bicultural Issues