Māori Women Look After Whānau And Whenua
Māori women play a key role in caring for their
whānau and the environment, and make a significant
contribution to society, Stats NZ Tatauranga Aotearoa said
today.
The data on Māori women was collected in Te Kupenga 2018, a survey of Māori wellbeing. Almost 8,500 men and women of Māori ethnicity and/or descent answered the survey.
“Upholding cultural practices within whānau and the wider community is often driven by wāhine Māori,” wellbeing and housing statistics manager Dr Claire Bretherton said.
E manaaki ana ngā
wahine Māori i te whānau me te whenua
He mahi taketake te mahi a ngāi wāhine Māori ki te tiaki i ō rātou whānau, me te taiao, ā, he mahi nui tēnei mō te pāpori katoa, e ai ki Tatauranga Aotearoa Stats NZ i te rā nei.
I kohia ngā raraunga mō ngā wāhine Māori i te Kupenga 2018, i te tirohanga ki te toiora Māori. Tata ki te 8,500 ngā pakeke he momo Māori, he uri Māori hoki/rānei, i whakautu i te tirohanga.
"He nui ngā wa ka riro mā te wahine whakatairanga i ngā mahi tuku iho i roto i te whānau me te hapori nui tonu," e ai ki te kaiwhakahaere toiora, whare hoki ki a Tākuta Claire Bretherton.
Visit our website to read these
news stories, information release, infographic, and to
download CSV files:
- Te Kupenga: 2018 (final) – English
- Te Kupenga: 2018 (whakamutunga) – Te reo Māori
- Māori women look after whānau and whenua
- E manaaki ana ngā wahine Māori i te whānau me te whenua
- Waiho rā kia whakautua taku whenua – Let it be said that I caress my land – infographic
- Waiho rā kia whakautua taku whenua – pānui whakaahua
- CSV files for download