The Māori public sphere

At this moment in New Zealand’s history there is a need for healthy political debate on a range of issues. Specifically, the foreshore and seabed issue has created division and fears between Māori and Pakeha and brought the Treaty of Waitangi to the fore again. As well, settlements of histori...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ian Stuart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pacific Media Centre 2005-04-01
Series:Pacific Journalism Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/826
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spelling doaj-f6a7136b66f3443aafe750074719005f2020-11-25T02:42:41ZengPacific Media CentrePacific Journalism Review1023-94992324-20352005-04-0111110.24135/pjr.v11i1.826The Māori public sphereIan Stuart At this moment in New Zealand’s history there is a need for healthy political debate on a range of issues. Specifically, the foreshore and seabed issue has created division and fears between Māori and Pakeha and brought the Treaty of Waitangi to the fore again. As well, settlements of historic grievances with Māori have added to growing Pakeha unease. In this climate there is a need for wide-ranging public discussion of these issues, and the news media seem the obvious site for those discussions. But how well are the New Zealand news media fulfilling that role? This commentary takes the public sphere to be the sum total of all visible decision-making processes within a culture and uses this concept as an analytical tool to examine aspects of the health of New Zealand’s democracy. It uses discourse analysis approaches to show how the mainstream media are in fact isolating Māori from the general public sphere and, after outlining some general aspects of the Māori public sphere, argues that the news media’s methodologies, grounded in European-based techniques and approaches, are incapable of interacting with the Māori public sphere. I am arguing that while there is an appearance of an increased awareness and discussion of cultural issues, the mainstream media are, in reality, sidelining Māori voices and controlling the political discussion in favour of the dominant culture. They are therefore not fulfilling their self-assigned role of providing information for people to function within our democracy. Keywords:  https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/826indigenousindigenous public sphereculturecultural diversityidentity politicsIndigeneity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ian Stuart
spellingShingle Ian Stuart
The Māori public sphere
Pacific Journalism Review
indigenous
indigenous public sphere
culture
cultural diversity
identity politics
Indigeneity
author_facet Ian Stuart
author_sort Ian Stuart
title The Māori public sphere
title_short The Māori public sphere
title_full The Māori public sphere
title_fullStr The Māori public sphere
title_full_unstemmed The Māori public sphere
title_sort māori public sphere
publisher Pacific Media Centre
series Pacific Journalism Review
issn 1023-9499
2324-2035
publishDate 2005-04-01
description At this moment in New Zealand’s history there is a need for healthy political debate on a range of issues. Specifically, the foreshore and seabed issue has created division and fears between Māori and Pakeha and brought the Treaty of Waitangi to the fore again. As well, settlements of historic grievances with Māori have added to growing Pakeha unease. In this climate there is a need for wide-ranging public discussion of these issues, and the news media seem the obvious site for those discussions. But how well are the New Zealand news media fulfilling that role? This commentary takes the public sphere to be the sum total of all visible decision-making processes within a culture and uses this concept as an analytical tool to examine aspects of the health of New Zealand’s democracy. It uses discourse analysis approaches to show how the mainstream media are in fact isolating Māori from the general public sphere and, after outlining some general aspects of the Māori public sphere, argues that the news media’s methodologies, grounded in European-based techniques and approaches, are incapable of interacting with the Māori public sphere. I am arguing that while there is an appearance of an increased awareness and discussion of cultural issues, the mainstream media are, in reality, sidelining Māori voices and controlling the political discussion in favour of the dominant culture. They are therefore not fulfilling their self-assigned role of providing information for people to function within our democracy. Keywords: 
topic indigenous
indigenous public sphere
culture
cultural diversity
identity politics
Indigeneity
url https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/826
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