Structural Racism, Constitutional Transformation and the New Zealand Health Sector: Learnings from the Matike Mai Aotearoa Report

Date
2021-01-11
Authors
Came, Heather
Baker, Maria
McCreanor, Tim
Supervisor
Item type
Journal Article
Degree name
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Abstract

In colonial states and settings, constitutional arrangements are often forged within contexts that serve to maintain structural racism against Indigenous people. In 2013 the New Zealand government initiated national conversations about the constitutional arrangements in Aotearoa. Māori (Indigenous) leadership preceded this, initiating a comprehensive engagement process among Māori in 2010, which resulted in a report by Matike Mai Aotearoa which articulated a collective Māori vision of a written constitution congruent with te Tiriti o Waitangi (the founding document of the colonial state of New Zealand) by 2040.

This conceptual article explores the Matike Mai Aotearoa report on constitutional transformation as a novel means to address structural racism within the health system as a key domain within the constitutional sphere. Matike Mai suggests alternative conceptual structural formations through its focus on the kāwanatanga (governance), the relational and the tino rangatiratanga (sovereignty) sphere. This framework is informed by a range of Indigenous ethical values such as tikanga (protocol), belonging, and balance that can usefully inform the redesign of the health sector.

We assert that constitutional transformation and decolonization are potentially powerful ethical sources of disruption to whiteness and structural racism. We argue that, to eliminate entrenched health disparities, change processes need to be informed by the Indigenous inspirations expressed in the Matike Mai report.

Description
Keywords
1801 Law , 2201 Applied Ethics , 2203 Philosophy , Applied Ethics , 5001 Applied ethics
Source
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry, ISSN: 1176-7529 (Print), Springer, 18(1). doi: 10.1007/s11673-020-10077-w
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