F. Ware, M. Breheny & M. Forstor
This article unpacks the importance of Kaupapa Kōrero with a view to research methodologies.
Māori approaches, world views and historical, culture, social, political and linguistic experiences are central to building cohesion and strength across all of Aotearoa. When considering Kōrero Paki, it is easy to identify all of these elements within the practice and we can feel confident that as the practice evolves in its ‘place’ that the Kaupapa will be an important contributor to the transformation of the lives or Māori.
In Indigenous culture, stories are a common repository of knowledge and facilitate the process of knowing. Māori academics (Indigenous to Aotearoa New Zealand) have developed approaches based on key principles of Māori research, oral traditions and narrative inquiry to express experiences as Māori. To extend this, a Māori approach called Kaupapa Kōrero was developed to gather, present and understand Māori experiences. The application of whakapapa (genealogy) as a relational analytical framework provided a way of identifying personal kōrero (stories) and integrating them within layers of interrelated kōrero about their whānau (family), te ao Māori (Māori culture) and society that influences contemporary experiences of being Māori. Whakapapa also enabled a cross-examination of kōrero and identification of common intersecting factors such as Māori ethnicity, age, parenting status and socioeconomic position. This Māori narrative approach revealed a more complex and nuanced understanding of the interrelatedness and influence of societal expectations, indigeneity, Māori culture and whānau.
4 Dec 2017