Matauranga tuku iho tikanga rangahau: traditional knowledge and research ethics conference.
Aspin, Clive
Throughout the world, indigenous communities are demanding more of
a say in all aspects of research projects that involve them. This
includes having a say over the design, implementation and evaluation of
these projects. This approach is in marked contrast to research of
indigenous peoples in the past, which typically studied and scrutinised
indigenous peoples from paradigms that were foreign to the people being
investigated. From the early days of colonisation and into the present,
distorted views of Maori have been generated and disseminated by
researchers who have come from outside the Maori community and brought
western perspectives to the research process.
Most outside researchers do not consider the cultural practices or
existing knowledge of indigenous communities and give little or nothing
to indigenous communities in return for their contribution. Moreover,
many make no effort to employ local people in any capacity, regardless
of their abilities, or to compensate the individual participants,
regardless of the risks or burdens associated with the research. There
have been numerous cases where researchers have profited economically
and professionally from research in indigenous communities but have
treated the indigenous researchers as "informants" rather than
as colleagues, allowing them to appropriate the work of the indigenous
researchers as their own.
Nga Pae ote Maramatanga, National Institute of Research Excellence
for Maori Development and Advancement, is one of seven centres of
research excellence in New Zealand, and thus has a major responsibility
to provide a venue in which past research initiatives can be scrutinised
with a view to finding solutions that are in keeping with the needs and
priorities of indigenous peoples in contemporary times. With this in
mind, Nga Pae o te Maramatanga chose research ethics and traditional
knowledge as the focal topics of their inaugural international
conference, held at Te Papa Tongarewa in Wellington from 10-12 June
2004. (1)
All too often, research with indigenous communities is conducted in
a way that is unethical and that is, therefore, detrimental to the needs
and wellbeing of indigenous communities. An international conference
that focused on the needs and perspectives of indigenous peoples, as
identified by indigenous peoples themselves, was considered to be
entirely appropriate for this foundational event.
Accordingly, the conference addressed several strands of work,
including research with socially excluded groups, bioethics, the
challenges presented by the knowledge economy, tikanga Maori, matauranga
and indigenous knowledge, and the rapid advances being made in new
technologies.
The programme of the conference aimed at having these issues
addressed and discussed with the maximum benefit to a wide range of
stakeholders. One of the major organising themes of Nga Pae o te
Maramatanga is engagement with Maori communities. The conference
involved, therefore, a high degree of community participation through a
series of community dialogues that fed into the main conference at Te
Papa. These dialogues were generated at a series of community workshops
that took place throughout New Zealand in the days preceding the
conference.
A complementary component of these community forums was attendance
by international keynote speakers who visited each local community and
then presented findings at the conference in Wellington. International
speakers included Dr Stephen Sodeke (Nigeria/USA), Debra Harry (USA),
Alejandro Argumendo (Peru), Lopeti Senituli (Tonga), Sally Riley
(Australia), Professor Donna Dickenson (UK) and Professor Nancy King
(USA). As well, a range of local keynote speakers, including Judge Edie
Durie, Professor Hirini Mead, Professor Linda Smith and Associate
Professor Michael Walker, provided a Maori perspective to complement
issues raised by community representatives.
A wide range of concerns about research with Maori and indigenous
communities were voiced by community representatives and other speakers.
While individual concerns were expressed by each community, common
themes came through clearly at the gathering in Wellington.
Dr Stephen Sodeke highlighted the need to work closely with
indigenous communities, many of whom are particularly vulnerable to a
range of social pressures and sometimes to the unethical practices of
researchers. As he expressed it, research with indigenous communities
should lead to human flourishing, a concept which he described as
allowing individuals and communities to reach their fullest potential
through active and consensual participation in all aspects of the
research process:
We must not shy away from protecting vulnerable populations. Their
vulnerability should not reduce their intrinsic worth as human
beings ... Social justice demands that everyone be assisted to
flourish regardless of their state in life.
Other speakers, too, spoke of the need to deal with people in a
respectful way so as to ensure the preservation of traditional knowledge
in generations to come. Underlying this approach, however, must be a
commitment to acknowledging our past so that we can understand where we
have come from. Such an approach is particularly important as we
endeavour to understand and apply tikanga in a contemporary context. As
described by Sir Tipene O'Regan who participated in the community
forum convened in Bluff, "Tikanga is applied morality, shifting
through time".
One of the overwhelming messages of the conference was that
delivered by Judge Durie, who identified trust as fundamental to all
research relationships. This message was endorsed by a number of
speakers who placed trust at the centre of good ethical research with
indigenous communities.
This conference has identified a range of issues that have
particular relevance for Maori and indigenous communities in the 21st
century. Too often, external researchers move into communities without
consultation, ask personal questions, draw conclusions that are not
based on actual knowledge of community dynamics and then disappear, with
the community never being informed of the results or conclusions of the
research. Such an approach undermines community integrity and does
nothing to meet the needs of indigenous communities. This does damage to
the communities themselves and means that other people, such as policy
makers, are hamstrung in their efforts to provide effective policy for
indigenous peoples. It is hoped that this conference might go some way
to setting new standards for research with indigenous communities, not
only here in New Zealand, but throughout the world.
The conference was held in Wellington especially in the hope that
many of the messages from the conference would be heard and taken up by
Government policy makers. The next Nga Pae o te Maramatanga conference
will be held in two years' time and will pick up on the messages
delivered at this conference with a view to advancing and developing
ethical research with Maori and indigenous communities.
(1) Copies of the conference proceedings are available from Nga Pae
o te Maramatanga at the University of Auckland.
Dr Clive Aspin Executive Research Officer Nga Pae ote Maramatanga