The Role of Te Ao Māori in Aotearoa's Disaster Management Strategies w Dr. Shaun Awatere and Professor Christine Kenney
The Role of Te Ao Māori in Aotearoa's Disaster Management Strategies w Dr. Shaun Awatere and Professor Christine Kenney
The Role of Te Ao Māori in Aotearoa's Disaster Management Strategies w Dr. Shaun Awatere and Professor Christine KenneyLast month saw the release of an independent review examining the emergency management of Cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay last year. Insights revealed the key role marae, iwi and hāpu played in disaster response, heralding calls for strategies more inclusive of te ao Māori.
Producer Jasmine Gray spoke with Dr. Shaun Awatere, of Ngāti Porou, who is Kaihautū Māori Research Impact Leader and Manaaki Whenua at Landcare Research. He discussed the ways in which national and local bureaucracies can be more formally inclusive of te Ao Māori and mana whenua approaches.
Jasmine also spoke with Professor Christine Kenney, of Te Ātiawa ki Kāpati, Ngāi Tahu, and Ngāti Toarangatira. Amongst an impressive array of interdisciplinary roles in this area, Christine is the Chair of Disaster Risk Reduction at Massey University, and she provided us more insight about what the report’s findings mean for Aotearoa’s wider emergency management frameworks.