TY - SER AU - Tupaea, Morgan AU - Le Grice, Jade AU - Smith, Fern TI - Invisibilised colonial norms and the occlusion of mātauranga Māori in the care and protection of tamaiti atawhai PY - 2022/// PB - Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga, KW - CULTURE KW - CHILD PROTECTION KW - COLONISATION KW - MĀORI KW - RANGAHAU MĀORI KW - SOCIAL SERVICES KW - TAIPŪWHENUATANGA KW - TAMARIKI KW - TAIOHI KW - TOKO I TE ORA KW - TIKANGA TUKU IHO KW - NEW ZEALAND N1 - MAI Journal, 2022, 11(2): 91-102 N2 - Maori children are uplifted by the New Zealand government at disproportionate rates compared with tauiwi children. The removal of tamariki from culturally embedded networks exacerbates intergenerational trauma created by colonisation. Placements into unsafe contexts mean that additional instances of harm and cumulative trauma are common, and tamaiti atawhai are not positioned within fullness of their cultural being. This article draws on a broader Kaupapa Māori project involving semistructured interviews with kaiāwhina Māori across the North Island. Using thematic analysis, this article discusses collisions between settler-colonialism and Māori culture experienced by kaiāwhina. State disengagement with Māori culture poses harm to Māori staff and constrains the utility of tikanga Māori through the unquestioned dominance of Eurocentric approaches while enacting harm upon whānau. This work positions radical structural overhaul of existing state care systems as imperative while seeking to illuminate elements of settler-colonialism that prevent care and protection systems from incorporating mātauranga Māori. (Authors' abstract). Record #7998 UR - https://www.journal.mai.ac.nz/content/invisibilised-colonial-norms-and-occlusion-m%C4%81tauranga-m%C4%81ori-care-and-protection-tamaiti?page=1 ER -