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An Academic Occupation: Mobilisation, Sit-In, Speaking Out and Confrontation in the Experiences of Māori Academics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2012

Ocean Ripeka Mercier*
Affiliation:
Te Kawa a Māui (Māori Studies), Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Christine Asmar
Affiliation:
Murrup Barak, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Susan Page
Affiliation:
Warawara Department of Indigenous Studies, Macquarie University, Australia
*
Address for Correspondence: Ocean Mercier, Te Kawa a Māui (Māori Studies), Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington, 6140, New Zealand. E-mail: Ocean.Mercier@vuw.ac.nz
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Abstract

Māori and other Indigenous scholars have been calling for the Indigenisation of academic space for decades. But what is the day-to-day experience of Māori academics within Aotearoa–New Zealand universities, and how does this experience reveal or enact the commitments to claim space? We interviewed 12 Māori academics and analysed and organised their experiences in the following way: the university can be understood as a site of (1) mobilisation of Māori staff and students; (2) sit-in, or infusing the institutional system with Indigenous values; (3) speaking out, thereby educating not only students, but staff and the public about Indigenous issues; and (4) at which confrontation is part of the academic terrain. The most common outcome of confrontation was negotiation and reclamation of space for Māori people, norms and values. In spite of this apparent willingness of the university to compromise, we find that capitulation (being moulded to the norms of the academy) and (self-)eviction (reconciling difference by leaving the university) are ever-present possibilities for Māori academics. In shaping and presenting the Māori academic occupation as a 4-stage commitment to affirm Māori identity, norms and scholarship, we present a framework within which Indigenous and minority academic work may be understood.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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