Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Wendy Henwood"'
Publikováno v:
AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples. 17:306-316
Complex multidimensional challenges have prompted a transformational shift towards holistic research integration with knowledge systems differing from conventional science. Embracing diverse ontological and epistemological approaches through new styl
Autor:
Wendy Henwood, Joanne Murray, Tim McCreanor, Selena Bercic, Pauline Waiti, Mishayla Mitchell, Helen Moewaka Barnes, Rebecca Chee, Mina Pomare-Peita
Publikováno v:
Global health promotion. 26(3_suppl)
Connections and belonging to ancestral lands are strongly and consistently argued as fundamental to Māori education, health and wellbeing. When our connections with and access to health-promoting places of belonging are damaged, we lose more than co
Autor:
Waikarere Gregory, Helen Moewaka Barnes, Troy Brockbank, Kaio Hooper, Wendy Henwood, Tim McCreanor
Publikováno v:
EcoHealth. 13:623-632
In Aotearoa New Zealand, Māori aspirations around land and water conflict with settler interests. As indigenous people, Māori struggle to enact agency over resources, despite Treaty (Treaty of Waitangi/Te Tiriti o Waitangi is an 1840 agreement betw
Autor:
Wendy Henwood, Remana Henwood
Publikováno v:
AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples. 7:220-232
Mana whenua (people with customary authority over land) have been grappling with the environmental collapse of Lake Ōmāpere in the north of New Zealand. The situation is of immense significance to us and Ngāpuhi-nuitonu (Northland tribes and sub-t
Autor:
Wendy Henwood, Aroha Harris
Publikováno v:
AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples. 3:146-162
Te R ū nanga o Te Rarawa, like other iwi organisations, strives for seamlessness and holism in its operations. Yet, much of its work is characterised by compartmentalisation of, for example, funding, service provision, service contracts, government
Publikováno v:
Substance usemisuse. 42(12-13)
Engaging communities in alcohol consumption–related action projects requires the application of a range of flexible and responsive evidence-based methods. These include: establishing collaborative relationships, implementing strategies to improve a