Angela Moewaka Barnes
Massey University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Angela Moewaka Barnes.
Journal of Health Psychology | 2006
Raymond Nairn; Frank Pega; Tim McCreanor; Jenny Rankine; Angela Moewaka Barnes
International literature has established that racism contributes to ill-health of migrants, ethnic minorities and indigenous peoples. Racism generally negates wellbeing, adversely affecting physical and psychological health. Numerous studies have shown that media contribute marginalizing particular ethnic and cultural groups depicting them primarily as problems for and threats to the dominant. This articles frames media representations of, and their effect on, the indigenous Maori of Aotearoa, New Zealand within the ongoing processes of colonization. We argue that reflects the media contribution to maintenance and naturalisation of colonial relationships and seek to include critical media scholarship in a critical public health psychology.
AlterNative | 2011
Amanda Gregory; Belinda Borell; Tim McCreanor; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Raymond Nairn; Jenny Rankine; Sue Abel; Ken Taiapa; Hector Kaiwai
The media has the potential to undermine wellbeing and opportunities for Treaty-based social justice in its representation of Māori, relationships between Māori and non-Māori, and in its promotion of particular understandings of the Treaty of Waitangi. This paper presents research exploring the meaning-making of Pākehā and tauiwi (immigrant) focus group participants in relation to media representations of Māori and the Treaty of Waitangi. We also discuss the impact of recurrent media portrayals of Māori and the Treaty on health and well being as understood by the focus groups.
Qualitative Research | 2017
Helen Moewaka Barnes; Te Raina Gunn; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Emerald Muriwai; Margaret Wetherell; Tim McCreanor
Wairua, a Maori (indigenous peoples of Aotearoa New Zealand) concept, somewhat restrictively translated as spirit or spirituality, resonates with many indigenous peoples globally. While spirit is recognised as an important human dimension, the denigration of non-western spiritual understandings means that indigenous peoples often choose to remain silent. Transferring these concerns to research approaches, we edit our voices, with a view to what we think will count as knowledge and what we choose to share with academic audiences. This article discusses the challenges we face when we enter into conversations about wairua and how this might be approached in research. With reference to emerging social science innovations in affect and emotion, the article draws on audio visual recordings of people’s experiences of significant national days in Aotearoa New Zealand. Issues of analysis and representation are explored, along with the potential of these methods to explicate feelings, emotions and spirit.
Journal of Research in Nursing | 2014
Raymond Nairn; Ruth DeSouza; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Jenny Rankine; Belinda Borell; Tim McCreanor
This educational piece seeks to apprise nurses and other health professionals of mass media news practices that distort social and health policy development. It focuses on two media discourses evident in White settler societies, primarily Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States, drawing out implications of these media practices for those committed to social justice and health equity. The first discourse masks the dominant culture, ensuring it is not readily recognised as a culture, naturalising the dominant values, practices and institutions, and rendering their cultural foundations invisible. The second discourse represents indigenous peoples and minority ethnic groups as ‘raced’ – portrayed in ways that marginalise their culture and disparage them as peoples. Grounded in media research from different societies, the paper focuses on the implications for New Zealand nurses and their ability to practise in a culturally safe manner as an exemplary case. It is imperative that these findings are elaborated for New Zealand and that nurses and other health professionals extend the work in relation to practice in their own society.
Pacific Journalism Review | 2012
Angela Moewaka Barnes; Belinda Borell; Ken Taiapa; Jenny Rankine; Raymond Nairn; Tim McCreanor
Archive | 2005
Angela Moewaka Barnes; Amanda Gregory; Tim McCreanor; Raymond Nairn; Frank Pega; Jennifer Rankine
New Zealand Journal of Psychology | 2011
Raymond Nairn; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Jenny Rankine; Belinda Borell; Sue Abel; Tim McCreanor
Pacific Journalism Review | 2014
Jenny Rankine; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Tim McCreanor; Raymond Nairn; Anna-Lyse McManus; Sue Abel; Belinda Borell; Amanda Gregory
Pacific Journalism Review | 2011
Jenny Rankine; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Belinda Borell; Tim McCreanor; Raymond Nairn; Amanda Gregory
Sites: a journal of social anthropology and cultural studies | 2014
Tim McCreanor; Jenny Rankine; Angela Moewaka Barnes; Belinda Borell; Raymond Nairn; Anna-Lyse McManus