Ngā Takunetanga

Events

Come along to our monthly online hui.

Each month we will have different people giving presentations with the next one scheduled for Tuesday 10th of October.

Please email s.mills@massey.ac.nz if you would like the link.

The Australian Journal of Emergency Management are pleased to announce an upcoming Indigenous Special Issue.

There is a call for expression of interest from Indigenous authors, or Indigenous-led research, community, or government initiatives, programs, or projects, who wish to contribute. Submissions are invited from across Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand and will be considered by Guest Editors, Bhiamie Williamson – Euahlayi (Monash University) and, Lucy Kaiser- Kāi Tahu, Kāti Māmoe, Waitaha (Massey University, GNS Science).

Practitioners, professionals, academics, and community representatives are encouraged to submit for publication consideration. AJEM accepts academic research papers, practice notes, reports, book reviews, short articles, news briefs, workshops summaries and upcoming event information. Cultural content, such as poems, story, waiata, songs and videos will be considered for this edition.

If you are interested in contributing, please contact Lucy Kaiser L.H.Kaiser@massey.ac.nz by the 19th of July 2024

Present events

Each month we will have different people giving presentations with the next one scheduled for Monday 10th October 2023 10-11 am NZT.

Professor Anthony Hoete will be giving a presentation on Mīmiru: the house of technology.

Please email s.mills@massey.ac.nz if you would like the link.

Past events

May: 

Professor Hemi Whaanga – Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa/ Massey University “Mātauranga Māori and the environment”.

June:

Dr Suzanne Phibbs – Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa/ Massey University “What can we learn from the Titanic? Disasters and the social patterning of adverse outcomes”.

July:

Hema Wihongi – Toka Tū Ake “The importance of indigenous stories within Te Ao Māori and Mātauranga Māori, and how engaging audiences through story can help build relationships between the science sector and iwi Māori”.

August:

Associate Professor Dan Hikuroa – Te Wānanga o Waipapa, Waipapa Taumata Rau/ University of Auckland “Heed the Taniwha – How Mātauranga can inform DRR”.

September:

Hollei Gabrielson – Department of Conservation (DOC) “From iwi to the crown, a transition from Environmental Management to Volcanic Risk Management – where does mātauranga māori fit?”.