Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Benevolent racism; Pākehā attitudes and Māori men’s experiences
View through CrossRef
<p>Benevolent racism, racism that is expressed through seemingly positive beliefs and emotional responses, is shown to play an insidious role in upholding negative racial stereotypes and inequality. Although a considerable amount of research has been done on racism in Aotearoa New Zealand (ANZ), very little has focused specifically on the prevalence and impacts of benevolent racism. This research comprises two studies to explore the role of benevolent racism in ANZ, focusing specifically on benevolent racism towards Māori men through expressions of their superior athletic and practical/manual skills. Study 1 (N = 312) was an experimental study which used multilevel modelling to predict the effects of benevolent racism on guidance given to a Māori male student. The results showed that as Pākehā endorsement of benevolent racism increased, Pākehā rated practical/manual activities to be increasingly important and school to be decreasingly important for a hypothetical Māori male student. In study 2 (N = 10), interviews explored the experiences of Māori men in ANZ and whether benevolent racism manifested in these experiences. A thematic analysis derived four main themes: Identity and Culture, Challenges, Whānau and Positive Experiences and the results highlighted that participants’ encounters of racism were predominantly of the hostile, rather than benevolent, sort. These findings shed light on the continued role of racism in ANZ and how it is linked to other aspects of Māori men’s experiences. These studies also highlight the need for a bottom-up exploration of the profile and functions of benevolent racism in ANZ.</p>
Title: Benevolent racism; Pākehā attitudes and Māori men’s experiences
Description:
<p>Benevolent racism, racism that is expressed through seemingly positive beliefs and emotional responses, is shown to play an insidious role in upholding negative racial stereotypes and inequality.
Although a considerable amount of research has been done on racism in Aotearoa New Zealand (ANZ), very little has focused specifically on the prevalence and impacts of benevolent racism.
This research comprises two studies to explore the role of benevolent racism in ANZ, focusing specifically on benevolent racism towards Māori men through expressions of their superior athletic and practical/manual skills.
Study 1 (N = 312) was an experimental study which used multilevel modelling to predict the effects of benevolent racism on guidance given to a Māori male student.
The results showed that as Pākehā endorsement of benevolent racism increased, Pākehā rated practical/manual activities to be increasingly important and school to be decreasingly important for a hypothetical Māori male student.
In study 2 (N = 10), interviews explored the experiences of Māori men in ANZ and whether benevolent racism manifested in these experiences.
A thematic analysis derived four main themes: Identity and Culture, Challenges, Whānau and Positive Experiences and the results highlighted that participants’ encounters of racism were predominantly of the hostile, rather than benevolent, sort.
These findings shed light on the continued role of racism in ANZ and how it is linked to other aspects of Māori men’s experiences.
These studies also highlight the need for a bottom-up exploration of the profile and functions of benevolent racism in ANZ.
</p>.
Related Results
Maori Values Can Reinvigorate a New Zealand Philosophy
Maori Values Can Reinvigorate a New Zealand Philosophy
<p>This thesis explores Maori values that can be seen in traditional Maori philosophy and attempts to define those values and how they are recognizable in Aotearoa/New Zealan...
Tangata Ngākau: Māori Boys and Masculinity in the Writing of Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka
Tangata Ngākau: Māori Boys and Masculinity in the Writing of Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka
<p>This thesis surveys a selection of writing by Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka, and considers how these texts represent varying modes of masculinity availab...
Benevolent racism; Pākehā attitudes and Māori men’s experiences
Benevolent racism; Pākehā attitudes and Māori men’s experiences
<p>Benevolent racism, racism that is expressed through seemingly positive beliefs and emotional responses, is shown to play an insidious role in upholding negative racial ste...
Maori Education Developments: A Maori Unionist’s View
Maori Education Developments: A Maori Unionist’s View
During 1992, many hands seized the chance to paddle the Maori education waka in the primary system.The Maori community continued to establish Kura Kaupapa Maori, immersion and bi...
Kia Tomokia Te Kākahu O Te Reo Māori: He whakamahere i ngā kōwhiri reo a te reo rua Māori
Kia Tomokia Te Kākahu O Te Reo Māori: He whakamahere i ngā kōwhiri reo a te reo rua Māori
<p>Kua eke te hunga kōrero Māori ki tōna 150,000 te rahi i te tau 2013 (Statistics New Zealand). Ahakoa tērā, kāore tonu i te kaha kōrerotia te reo Māori. Kei roto i te whak...
Māori Art and Architecture
Māori Art and Architecture
Maori art history originates in Te Po/The Darkness when the parents Ranginui/Sky Father and Papatūānuku/Earth Mother were joined. They were later separated by some of their sons wh...
'Akapapa'anga Ara Tangata: Genealogising the (Cook Islands) Māori imaginary
'Akapapa'anga Ara Tangata: Genealogising the (Cook Islands) Māori imaginary
<p><b>For Cook Islands Māori (Māori) peoples, genealogical practices, or what is referred to as ‘akapapa‘anga ara tangata (‘akapapa‘anga), are central to identity-makin...
'Akapapa'anga Ara Tangata: Genealogising the (Cook Islands) Māori imaginary
'Akapapa'anga Ara Tangata: Genealogising the (Cook Islands) Māori imaginary
<p><b>For Cook Islands Māori (Māori) peoples, genealogical practices, or what is referred to as ‘akapapa‘anga ara tangata (‘akapapa‘anga), are central to identity-makin...

