Qualitative scoping study which explores lived experience of Māori participants caring for family members through illness; explores the values and worldviews that most measures of health and well-being in settler societies and asks what Indigenous measures of health might look like.
Article explores the liminal position of mixed race Indigenous/non-Indigenous people in the Canadian context, discusses the polarity of Identity and the ways in which identity can be and is used to surveil and police Indigenous people in a settler society.
AlterNative, vol. 16, no. 1, March 2020, pp. 64-75
Description
Study of 42 older Māori (18 men, 24 women) renters in the Hawke’s Bay region of Aotearoa - New Zealand examines the experience of elders who are renting. Findings discuss living costs, landlord relationships, family relationships, and a comparison to home ownership.