KEI TE MURA O TE AHI
MARATHON FOR RACIAL JUSTICE 22 MARCH, 2024
It has never been easier for us to organise globally for racial justice. Te Tiriti-Based Futures: Anti-Racism 2024 is an open-access, online, anti-racism gathering originating in Aotearoa to mark International Race Relations Day.
Current tertiary students and recent graduates (in the last five years) will present their research live on Friday 22nd March 2024. Each will have seven minutes to present. Once presentations finish, virtual break-out rooms will be opened for the remainder of the hour to allow the audience to engage with speakers. Presentations will be in Pechakucha* format and can be in any language.
KEI TE MURA O TE AHI PROGRAMME
08:30AM | Aotearoa's Heart Language | Watene Malcolm Ernest Moon |
08:30AM | Wind gusts, bear encounters and data collection: students' stories of doing field research | Justin Turner |
08:30AM | What is Midwifery Learning and Teaching without colonisation? | Annabel Farry |
08:30AM | Māori history can be a freeing shaper: Embracing Māori histories to construct a good Pākehā identity | Rachelle Pedersen |
09:30AM | Making sense of Asianisation in psychology | Kyle Tan |
09:30AM | Nō wai mātou? What does it mean to be tangata tiriti? | Etienne Wain |
09:30AM | Racism in paradise: Being migrants in urban agriculture in Aotearoa New Zealand | Marcela Palomino-Schalscha, Maria Teresa Braga Bizarria, and Isabella Sanchez-Bolivar |
09:30AM | Who would we be if they did not tell us who we were? - Reflections on colonialism and appropriated oppression | Christiane Ndedi Essombe |
10:30AM | Whitia Kia Ora: Bridging the Gaps | Monleigh Ikiua |
10:30AM | Haumaru Panuku Oranga: A qualitative study about Kaumatua Māori and their experience of mobility and transport in Aotearoa New Zealand | Kim Arrowsmith |
10:30AM | Five features of a 'good' tool for whānau engagement | Mythily Meher |
10:30AM | Māori Experiences of Physical Rehabilitation in Aotearoa | Becky Sheehy |
11:30AM | Te Tiriti based anti-racism of Pākehā allies | Ngaire Rae |
11:30AM | A visualisation of Angela Ballara’s (1986) Proud to be White? | Romy Attewell |
11:30AM | Tracing the trajectory of Tiriti work in Aotearoa New Zealand | Dani Pickering |
11.30AM | “An investigation into the impact of Pākehā culture on social work practice with Māori clients, as explored by Pākehā social workers in supervision: A Qualitative Study” | Tui Armstrong |
12:30PM | Unpacking the referendum on Māori wards | Sandra des Forges |
12:30PM | Diversifying Leadership within the Public Service: How the Institution Will becomes the Institutional Wall | Natalia Albert Llorente |
For further information contact Ngaire.Rae@outlook.com
Watch the 2022 speakers on the PechaKucha website
A pechakucha* presentation is a powerful and effective way of sharing stories, research and inspiration. Presenters have 20 slides with 20 seconds of commentary per slide. The entire presentation takes seven minutes.
* Japanese for ‘chitchat’