Te Aorerekura One (Action Plan 1)

$440.00
Dates:
Accommodation:

This wānanga establishes the foundations for transforming Aotearoa's response to family, sexual, and gender-based violence. It shifts the focus from crisis response to prevention and healing, centered on Te Tiriti o Waitangi, uplifting Māori leadership, and creating a shared national vision for long-term system change.

Evening Workshop Rotations include:

  • Child Protection in Practice: Early risk awareness and collaborative support for tamariki.

  • Staff Risk Assessment & Workforce Safety: Protecting the wellbeing of kaimahi in complex environments.

  • End-to-End (E2E) & SOS Architectural Framework: An integrated model for system-wide prevention and crisis response.

Facilitator Bio

Associate Professor Alayne Mikahere-Hall Alayne is a senior Māori academic, researcher, and leader specializing in Hauora Māori, Violence and Trauma studies, and Indigenous research. She is the Co-Director of the Taupua Waiora Research Centre and an Associate Professor at Auckland University of Technology (AUT). Her work, affiliated with Ngāti Whātua, Te Rarawa, and Tainui-Maniapoto, is dedicated to reducing family violence and building culturally responsive workforce capability guided by Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

This wānanga establishes the foundations for transforming Aotearoa's response to family, sexual, and gender-based violence. It shifts the focus from crisis response to prevention and healing, centered on Te Tiriti o Waitangi, uplifting Māori leadership, and creating a shared national vision for long-term system change.

Evening Workshop Rotations include:

  • Child Protection in Practice: Early risk awareness and collaborative support for tamariki.

  • Staff Risk Assessment & Workforce Safety: Protecting the wellbeing of kaimahi in complex environments.

  • End-to-End (E2E) & SOS Architectural Framework: An integrated model for system-wide prevention and crisis response.

Facilitator Bio

Associate Professor Alayne Mikahere-Hall Alayne is a senior Māori academic, researcher, and leader specializing in Hauora Māori, Violence and Trauma studies, and Indigenous research. She is the Co-Director of the Taupua Waiora Research Centre and an Associate Professor at Auckland University of Technology (AUT). Her work, affiliated with Ngāti Whātua, Te Rarawa, and Tainui-Maniapoto, is dedicated to reducing family violence and building culturally responsive workforce capability guided by Te Tiriti o Waitangi.