000 02423nab a22003617a 4500
999 _c5686
_d5686
005 20250625151442.0
008 171123s2018 -nz||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aBorell, Belinda
_97195
245 _aConceptualising historical privilege :
_bthe flip side of historical trauma, a brief examination
_cBelinda Borell, Helen Moewaka Barnes and Tim McCreanor
260 _bSage,
_c2018
500 _aAlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples, 2018, 14(1): 25-34
520 _aHistorical trauma is an important and growing area of research that provides crucial insights into the antecedents of current-day inequities in health and social wellbeing experienced by Indigenous people in colonial settler societies. What is not so readily examined is the flip side of historical trauma experienced by settlers and their descendants, what might be termed “historical privilege”. These historic acts of privilege for settlers, particularly those emigrating from Britain, provide the antecedents for the current-day realities for their descendants and the structural, institutional and interpersonal levels of advantage that are also a key feature of inequities between Indigenous and settler. This article theorises an explicit link between historical trauma and historical privilege and explores how the latter may be examined with particular reference to Aotearoa New Zealand. Three core elements of historical trauma are posited as a useful framework to apply to historical privilege. (Authors' abstract). Record #5686
650 _9307
_aINDIGENOUS PEOPLES
650 _aCOLONISATION
_95710
650 _aHISTORICAL TRAUMA
_95295
650 _aINTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
_97196
650 _aMĀORI
_9357
650 5 _9568
_aSOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS
650 5 _aĀHUATANGA PĀPORI
_92932
650 5 _aĀHUATANGA ŌHANGA
_92927
650 5 _aIWI TAKETAKE
_95589
650 5 _aPĀMAMAE HEKE IHO
_96928
650 5 _aRANGAHAU MĀORI
_95532
650 5 _aTAIPŪWHENUATANGA
_95548
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
700 _aMoewaka Barnes, Helen
_96902
700 _aMcCreanor, Tim
_96903
773 0 _tAlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples, 2018, 14(1): 25-34
830 _95300
_aAlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples
856 _uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1177180117742202
_yRead abstract
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE