Research Commons
      • Browse 
        • Communities & Collections
        • Titles
        • Authors
        • By Issue Date
        • Subjects
        • Types
        • Series
      • Help 
        • About
        • Collection Policy
        • OA Mandate Guidelines
        • Guidelines FAQ
        • Contact Us
      • My Account 
        • Sign In
        • Register
      View Item 
      •   Research Commons
      • University of Waikato Research
      • Arts and Social Sciences
      • Arts and Social Sciences Papers
      • View Item
      •   Research Commons
      • University of Waikato Research
      • Arts and Social Sciences
      • Arts and Social Sciences Papers
      • View Item
      JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

      Indigenous-washing and colonial amnesia: how New Zealand’s nation brand depoliticizes climate change

      Hellmann, Olli
      Thumbnail
      Files
      20571-76038-1-PB.pdf
      925.5Kb
      Link
       ijoc.org
      Find in your library  
      Permanent link to Research Commons version
      https://hdl.handle.net/10289/15968
      Abstract
      New Zealand’s nation brand has drawn ever louder accusations of “greenwashing” the country’s image in recent years. Through a visual discourse analysis of Air New Zealand’s Tiaki & The Guardians safety briefing video, this article shows that brand managers have responded with a strategy of “Indigenous-washing,” appropriating the Māori worldview to deflect attention from intensive farming’s carbon footprint and other environmentally unfriendly activities. More broadly, this article makes an important contribution to the growing critical-cultural literature on nation branding by revealing how New Zealand’s latest marketing initiative contributes to the depoliticization of climate change. The “Tiaki” campaign not only positions New Zealand as an “untouched land,” but also closes the space for democratic debate about climate change by obscuring the role of colonialism in causing the planet’s ecological crisis and by silencing alternative socioecological futures proposed by Indigenous peoples.
      Date
      2023-07-27
      Type
      Journal Article
      Publisher
      USC Annenberg Press
      Rights
      © 2023 The Author. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd).
      Collections
      • Arts and Social Sciences Papers [1525]
      Show full item record  

      Usage

      Downloads, last 12 months
      31
       
       

      Usage Statistics

      For this itemFor all of Research Commons

      The University of Waikato - Te Whare Wānanga o WaikatoFeedback and RequestsCopyright and Legal Statement