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Puna Kei‘ā: Te au tangata ē te ‘enua – The district of Kei‘ā: The people and the land
Graduate Thesis/Dissertation   Open access

Puna Kei‘ā: Te au tangata ē te ‘enua – The district of Kei‘ā: The people and the land

Master of Indigenous Studies - MIndS, University of Otago
2006
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/5165
Appears in  Dissertations

Abstract

Keia Mangaia research methods and ethics indigenous research by non-indigenous scholars cultural landscape Mangaian society Mangaian history mapping landscapes battlesites Tourism Michael Reilly Dr Michael Reilly Professor Michael Reilly Te Tumu DU Oceania (South Seas)
This seminar is about a place in the Cook Islands. To be more precise, it concerns a research project that explores the cultural meanings of the land comprising the district of Kei`ā, one of six wedge-shaped puna (districts) constituting the largest land units in the island of Mangaia. During my research over some 15 or more years there I have been privileged to build up a variety of relationships with the people of the land, the tangata `enua. The following seminar reflects upon the ethics of research in an indigenous community, and has benefitted from a long time collaboration with Dr Richard Walter, an archaeologist at the University of Otago. Many of the following ideas have developed in the course of conversations between the two of us about our work in Kei`ā.
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