Indigenous (Māori) sexual health psychologies in New Zealand : delivering culturally congruent sexuality education
Le Grice, Jade
Indigenous (Māori) sexual health psychologies in New Zealand : delivering culturally congruent sexuality education Jade Le Grice and Virginia Braun - Sage, 2017 - Journal of Health Psychology .
Journal of Health Psychology, 2017, Advance online publication, 13 December 2017
Indigenous (Māori) psychologies of sexual health occur at the cultural nexus of Indigenous and Western knowledge, colonising influence and intervention. Formal school-based sexuality education holds potential to intervene in this psychological space by decolonising notions of Māori sexuality, relationships and reproduction. This research utilises an Indigenous feminist (Mana Wāhine) methodology and interviews with 43 Māori participants (26 women and 17 men). We explore how Māori knowledges (mātauranga Māori), responsive to the surrounding colonising context, were interwoven through four themes: relationships, reproductive responsibility, open conversations about sexuality and contraceptive education. Indigenous knowledges can contribute to good sexual health psychologies for all. (Authors' abstract). Record #5707
MĀORI
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS
SCHOOLS
SEXUAL HEALTH
SEXUALITY
SEXUALITY EDUCATION
HŌKAKATANGA
MĀTAURANGA
RANGAHAU MĀORI
NEW ZEALAND
Indigenous (Māori) sexual health psychologies in New Zealand : delivering culturally congruent sexuality education Jade Le Grice and Virginia Braun - Sage, 2017 - Journal of Health Psychology .
Journal of Health Psychology, 2017, Advance online publication, 13 December 2017
Indigenous (Māori) psychologies of sexual health occur at the cultural nexus of Indigenous and Western knowledge, colonising influence and intervention. Formal school-based sexuality education holds potential to intervene in this psychological space by decolonising notions of Māori sexuality, relationships and reproduction. This research utilises an Indigenous feminist (Mana Wāhine) methodology and interviews with 43 Māori participants (26 women and 17 men). We explore how Māori knowledges (mātauranga Māori), responsive to the surrounding colonising context, were interwoven through four themes: relationships, reproductive responsibility, open conversations about sexuality and contraceptive education. Indigenous knowledges can contribute to good sexual health psychologies for all. (Authors' abstract). Record #5707
MĀORI
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS
SCHOOLS
SEXUAL HEALTH
SEXUALITY
SEXUALITY EDUCATION
HŌKAKATANGA
MĀTAURANGA
RANGAHAU MĀORI
NEW ZEALAND