The successful 2018 Marsden Fund recipients have been announced from across the country and this year the list includes many past and present NPM researchers working as Principal Investigators and Associate Investigators on a number of new, engaging and exciting projects.

The Marsden Fund grants support New Zealand’s best investigator-initiated research in the areas of science, engineering, maths, social sciences and the humanities and it is important that research borne out of matauranga Māori has been recognised and celebrated this year.



NPM's congratulations go to all the successful recipients, including:

 

PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS


Dr Aroha Harris (University of Auckland)
  • Whānau Ora With, Against, and Beyond the State
Professor Merata Kawharu (University of Otago)
  • A question of identity: how connected are Māori youth to ancestral marae, and does it matter?
Associate Professor Joanna Kidman (Victoria University of Wellington)
  • He Taonga te Wareware?: Remembering and Forgetting Difficult Histories in Aotearoa/ New Zealand
Dr Karyn Paringatai  (University of Otago)
  • E kore au e ngaro! The enduring legacy of whakapapa
Dr Haki Tuaupiki  (University of Waikato)
  • Te Kāpaukura a Kupe: The Ocean in the Sky - Māori Navigation Knowledge
Dr Waikaremoana Waitoki (University of Waikato)
  • The embrace of our ancestors: re-imagining and recontextualising mātauranga Māori in psychology
Associate Professor Angela Wanhalla  (University of Otago)
  • Te Hau Kāinga: Histories and Legacies of the Māori Home Front, 1939-45



ASSOCIATE INVESTIGATORS

Associate Professor Tom Roa (University of Waikato)
  • He Taonga te Wareware?: Remembering and Forgetting Difficult Histories in Aotearoa/ New Zealand
  • When and why did all the pā arrive? A multidisciplinary investigation into the spatial-temporal role of pā in the development of Māori culture

Professor Paul Tapsell (University of Melbourne)

  • A question of identity: how connected are Maori youth to ancestral marae, and does it matter?
Dr Waikaremoana Waitoki (University of Waikato)
  • When and why did all the pā arrive? A multidisciplinary investigation into the spatial-temporal role of pā in the development of Māori culture

Dr Krushil Watene (Massey University)

  • A question of identity: how connected are Maori youth to ancestral marae, and does it matter?

For more information on some of the above projects and researchers please link here to the Royal Society Te Apārangi website announcements

He Kōrero | Our Stories

Neuroscientist Nicole Edwards is establishing her own lab at the University of Auckland and is eager to tautoko students interested in a career in brain research.

AUT senior lecturer Deborah Heke encourages wāhine Māori to cherish their connection with te taiao.

Tairāwhiti local Manu Caddie is a vocal critic of forestry companies engaged in unsustainable land practices in the rohe. He shares his insights on what needs to change".