Publication | Open Access
The Pakaru ‘Pipeline’: Māori and Pasifika Pathways within the Academy
49
Citations
17
References
2020
Year
Faculty IssueColonialismEast Asian StudiesFaculty Professional DevelopmentEducationIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementCultural StudiesIndigenous StudyEducational AdministrationLanguage StudiesPasifika PathwaysPedagogyNew Zealand UniversitiesAcademic Career DevelopmentEducational LeadershipHigher Education ManagementHigher EducationCultureTeachingIndigenous Knowledge SystemsIndigenous StudiesMāori ExperiencesEthnographyAnthropologyProfessional DevelopmentCareer EducationSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
We examine the academic ‘pipeline’ for Māori and Pasifika graduates and illustrate the chronic under-representation of Māori and Pasifika in permanent academic positions in New Zealand universities. We identify areas within higher education where significant opportunities are being lost for the recruitment and retention of Māori and Pasifika. The narratives of Māori and Pasifika post-doctoral researchers, research associates and professional teaching fellows provide further insight into the advantages and disadvantages of these positions. Lastly, we propose a Pacific alternative metaphor ‘Pacific Navigation of Academic Pathways’ based on Pacific navigation, as opposed to the more commonly used term ‘pipeline’, in order to capture the nuances of Pasifika and Māori experiences.
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