15 March 2017

SHORE & Whāriki staff had their annual picnic in the Auckland Domain on the 24th February. Despite a little bit of rain, a lot of fun was had including some giant jenga! 

 
 
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17 January 2017

Professor Jane Mills, our new Pro Vice-Chancellor, College of Health, Massey University visited SHORE & Whariki offices yesterday morning and was informally introduced to staff. Today, some SHORE & Whariki staff attended a formal powhiri welcome at the Albany campus to welcome Professor Jane Mills to Massey University, and Dr Charlotte Severne, our new Assistant Vice-Chancellor, Maori and Pasifika to the Albany Campus.

 
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13 January 2017

Professor Sally Casswell was interviewed by Newstalk ZB, Radio Live and Radio New Zealand this morning, backing calls for a ban on alcohol sponsorship of sport. You can listen to the Radio Live interview here and the Radio New Zealand interview with Jesse Mulligan here

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22 November 2016

Release of NZ-ADUM 2015

The New Zealand Police havereleased the latest New Zealand Arrestee Drug Use Monitoring Programme Report (NZ-ADUM) which is produced by SHORE staff members.

The NZ-ADUM 2015 final report is now available for download 

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21 November 2016

Nui Te Kōrero: Rewriting National Narratives 2016

Recently researchers from Te Rōpū Whāriki went down to Wellington to present at the Māori Association of Social Science (MASS) conference (9th-11th November, 2016). The theme of the conference was Nui Te Kōrero: Rewriting National Narratives and the team presented analyses from the Wairua, Affect and National Days project. Whāriki ran a workshop on A wairua approach to research lead by Helen Moewaka Barnes alongside Angela Moewaka Barnes, Emerald Muriwai, Te Raina Gunn and Jade Le Grice. As well as this, Emerald presented on Privilege and denial of the nation’s foundation and discussed privilege and complexities associated with Waitangi Day for Māori and non-Māori.  The conference informs some of the upcoming outputs which will be updated on Whāriki’s project website over the next few months: http://www.wairuaaffectnationaldays.info/

Emerald from Te Rōpū Whāriki presenting Privilege and denial of the nation’s foundation

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31 October 2016

Professor Sally Casswell was quoted in a recently published article on Stuff following the publication of an article from the International Alcohol Control study. Professor Casswell and her co-authors found that heavier drinking sessions contribute to up to two-thirds of alcohol sales in middle-income countries and approximately half of sales in higher-income countries. The article can be found here.

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19 October 2016

Launch of Wairua, Affect and National Days Website

Tēnā koutou katoa,

Te Rōpū Whāriki would like to announce the launch of a website for the Wairua, Affect and National Days research.  The project is supported by the Marsden Fund Council from Government funding managed by the Royal Society of New Zealand.

The project began in 2013 exploring wairua, emotions, feelings and identity around national days particularly focusing on  Waitangi Day and Anzac Day. These days can build and divide, acknowledge and deny, include and exclude. Our research focuses on the affective politics evoked as people relate, engage and grapple with cultural observances and often-charged acts of remembrance in Aotearoa, New Zealand.  Methods include: haerenga kitea (a form of go along interviewing) where we filmed participants as they engaged in an event; media analysis; and individual and focus group interviews.

 The website includes visual images, evolving aspects of the project, links to research outputs and to sites about nationhood in Aotearoa. The website can be found at: http://www.wairuaaffectnationaldays.info

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18 October 2016

Dr Chris Wilkins was interviewed by Paul Henry about the government's 15-million dollar anti-drug initiative. Click here to watch the interview.

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21 September 2016

Dr Chris Wilkins featured in a TV One news item about policing of cannabis offences. Police are now targeting dealers rather then users -  there has been a major drop in the number of people being charged with the use and possession of cannabis in the past 20 years.

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5 September 2016

Whāriki  recently hosted student Jackie Johnson, who is a member of the Makah Nation. She recently finished her Master’s degree in Communication at the University of Washington and  was part of the Māhina International Indigenous Health Research Training Program through the Indigenous Wellness Research Institute at the University of Washington, University of Auckland, and University of Hawai’i’. It is funded through the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities. At Whāriki, under the supervision of Belinda Borell and Auckland Art Gallery’s Nigel Borell, Jackie looked at Māori epistemologies and methodologies, white privilege, indigenous art, and indigenous identity. Ms. Johnson’s project here was to observe indigenous art with a Kaupapa Māori research framework to identify Indigenous Authority while incorporating her people’s art practices. Ms. Johnson hopes to return back to Aotearoa and Te Rōpū Whāriki to research Māori whaling.

Jackie Johnson with recent Whāriki visiting students Cameri Taylor and Shalene Yazzie.

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26 August 2016

Professor Sally Casswell recently attended the WHO‐Thai Health Promotion Foundation Collaborative Project on Health Promotion: Technical Support for Alcohol Policy Development in Selected Low and Middle Income Countries in Bangkok, Thailand, as an expert advisor. The workshop ran from the 21st -23rd August 2016 and aimed to provide the technical support in strengthening the implementation of the global and regional strategies and plans for alcohol policy development in selected countries, including Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Myanmar, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka. 

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21 August 2016

Dr Chris Wilkins featured in an extended radio interview on cannabis clubs with Wallace Chapman on National Radio on Sunday Morning.

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1 August 2016

Te Rōpū Whāriki recently hosted Northern Arizona University students Cameri Taylor and Shalene Yazzie as a part of the Minority Health and Health Disparities International Research Training (MHIRT) Program. During their time here the students collaborated with Whāriki on the Māori Health Identities project and shared insights drawn from their Navajo culture. Cameri returns to Northern Arizona University to complete her Bachelor of Science in Health Sciences: Nursing and Shalene returns to start her Master’s Degree in Physician Assistant Studies.

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