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He ara uru ora : traditional Māori understandings of trauma and wellbeing by Tākirirangi Smith, edited by Rāwiri Tinirau and Cherryl Smith

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Whanganui, New Zealand : Te Atawhai o Te Ao: Independent Māori Institute for Environment & Health, 2019Description: electronic document (72 pages) ; PDF fileISBN:
  • 978-0-473-46778-4
Subject(s): Online resources:
Contents:
He takinga kōrero: Foreword -- He whakamārama mō He Ara Uru Ora: Explanation of title and images -- Whakapapa kōrero, trauma and well-being -- Memory and Māori ways of knowing -- Traditional Māori well-being -- Māori definitions of trauma -- Traditional responses to trauma -- Contemporary issues and pathways to well-being - He rārangi kupu: Glossary -- He rārangi rauemi: Bibliography
Summary: This book is part of the He Kokonga Whare Research Programme, funded by the Health Research Council of New Zealand, which examined Māori intergenerational trauma and healing. This book is a result of the Well-being Project that looks at kaupapa (purpose, subject, foundation) Māori ways of approaching health and well-being. These terms are usually approached without thinking about the framework of knowledge that informs the definition of these terms. (From the Foreword). Record #6211
List(s) this item appears in: Te ao Māori - Frameworks, strategies and tools
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Access online Access online Vine library Online Available ON19040005

He takinga kōrero: Foreword -- He whakamārama mō He Ara Uru Ora: Explanation of title and images -- Whakapapa kōrero, trauma and well-being -- Memory and Māori ways of knowing -- Traditional Māori well-being -- Māori definitions of trauma -- Traditional responses to trauma -- Contemporary issues and pathways to well-being - He rārangi kupu: Glossary -- He rārangi rauemi: Bibliography

This book is part of the He Kokonga Whare Research Programme, funded by the Health Research Council of New Zealand, which examined Māori intergenerational trauma and healing. This book is a result of the Well-being Project that looks at kaupapa (purpose, subject, foundation) Māori ways of approaching health and well-being. These terms are usually approached without thinking about the framework of knowledge that informs the definition of these terms. (From the Foreword). Record #6211

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