Turangawaewae

Date: November 22-23 2024

At IUE we strive to support Māori health and wellbeing through the effective and culturally responsive engagement between researchers and Māori communities - bridging the gap between Māori and health research. The purpose of this kaupapa has formed through an equity focused approach to support Tangata Tiriti Kairangahau partners in their efforts to engage with Māori communities with a mutually beneficial outcome being "Pae Ora", the advancement of Māori health outcomes.

We hope the taonga you will take from this experience will be: putting your efforts for kaupapa Māori engagement in rangahau into practice, deepening your understanding of Te Aō Māori, Mātauranga Māori and a kaupapa Māori approach, building and maintaining relationships

Contact: For any inquiries please contact Misty on 027 489 0804 or misty@iue.net.nz

Bookmark this page as more information coming soon

Tongariro-is-my-maunga

Our Story

Iwi United Engaged has arisen from a demand for my particular insights and skills from clinicians, health researchers and engineers.

test image 4

Our Team

Our team brings expertise in the application of Te Titiri (the Treaty of Waitangi) gained from working with Māori communities over a period of 26 years.

View of New Zealand tui bird on tree branch

Our Services

• Project execution services
• Research ideation
• Competency workshops

 

workshops-at-iwi-united-engaged

Workshops

Our advice and work typically falls under

• Project execution services
• Research ideation
• Competency workshops

Our Story

Our Team

Services

Workshops

logo iue paua

Who we have helped and

What they had to say

Thanks to you all.

I am super grateful for the workshop. It was very well thought out and informative. The way you presented the material was inspirational and really made me want to do a better job as a researcher.

Keep up the great work.

The meaning of generating partnerships and the importance of generating/sustaining relationships, to me that is the most important thing. I’ve always been afraid of tokenism, and have a genuine desire for partnership, I think Misty and Kev were great at helping to facilitate this in a genuine manner. I personally found the Manaaki session really interesting and I would love to attend more of these when I’m able.

Actively engaging conversations to address issues pertaining ethnic inequality and inequity, specifically pertaining to Māori. Taking active steps to better understand the Māori worldview and especially view of health and implementing this education in clinical practice. In addition to above, actively sharing information learned from this workshop to colleagues and recommending this course to colleagues in the research and clinical space.

I have gained understanding about my role as a treaty partner and how to describe my positionality in my research. I have begun to understand the best framework to use to ensure my research is following Kaupapa Māori approaches.

An important thing for me was feeling ok that I don’t know enough still (even though the course was great - it's just a big topic and it takes time and work); but that it is a partnership and there is support when you don’t know everything. By engaging with others (like the team at IUE), the best outcomes in clinical practice and research can be achieved. Thank you very much Misty, Kev and team.

I have learned that I have a lot to learn! I attended this course because I want to develop the way I approach my research to be more impactful and equity-focused. I feel like Ive evolved a lot over this course, and have started to recognise biases and gaps in knowledge in my own work because of my non-Māori worldview. I feel empowered to view my research through a more critical lens, and I now know where to start when I need input from more experienced researchers who are Māori and/or use Kaupapa Māori methodologies

Difficult conversations are ok to sometimes have to address unconscious bias. There is a need for ongoing effort to engage with Māori both as a clinician and in research to actually enable equity.

"Doin' good stuff"

All it takes for prejudice and disparities to continue is that good men and women do nothing:
We're doing something

Together with community

Pick a time to arrange a session with one of our consultants