A Critique of Rata on the Politics of Knowledge and Māori Education

Date
2019
Authors
Stewart, G
Devine, N
Supervisor
Item type
Journal Article
Degree name
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Volume Title
Publisher
Wilf Malcolm Institute of Educational Research
Abstract

This article unpacks and critiques the scholarship of Elizabeth Rata on the politics of knowledge in education. Rata represents a widespread, though covert, influence within the global academy of an imperialist form of philosophical universalism which has particular significance for Aotearoa New Zealand due to her vocal opposition to Kaupapa Māori education and Māori politics more generally. This article uses critical discourse analysis (CDA) to focus on the arguments of one key article, in order to expose its philosophical weaknesses. Our analysis shows that Rata’s scholarship is based on misconceptions of several key terms and concepts, which inexorably lead to inadequate arguments and invalid conclusions, and undermine the cogency of her claims about the ‘dangers’ of Kaupapa Māori education.

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Source
Waikato Journal of Education, 24(1), 93-101.
Rights statement
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.