Open Letter to Prof Moon on Maori Violence
Dear Professor Moon,
You are quoted in the NZ
Herald on 4/6/11 thus:
It was harmful to
stereotype Maori when there was no difference between Maori
and Pakeha parents in terms of violence. It would have been
more useful to work on the problems of drugs and alcohol
abuse in families instead, he said.
I
would argue that there is an ABSOLUTE difference between
Maori and Pakeha parents in terms of violence:
• Ngai Tahu Magazine – Te Karaka
(Moana Tapu):
The most unfortunate
fact is that Maori top the statistics when it comes to the
incidence and social cost of domestic violence, in what has
been described as a 'culture of violence'.
• Policy, Strategy and Research Group,
Department of Corrections, September 2007
Māori are disproportionately represented in
criminal justice statistics to an alarming degree.
• Ethnic Identity and
Intimate Partner Violence in a New Zealand Birth Cohort -
Ministry of Social Development 2008
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is an issue of
growing concern in New Zealand, with particular concerns
being raised about the over-representation of Māori in
surveys of IPV.
Three national crime
surveys have been undertaken in New Zealand. The objective
of this survey series was to ascertain the level of
victimisation occurring in New Zealand, as the vast majority
of incidents involving IPV are not reported to the New
Zealand Police (New Zealand Family Violence Clearinghouse
2007). The first survey was undertaken in 1996, and the
subsequent studies conducted in 2001 and 2006 each involved
refinements to the respective survey’s methodological
design. However, independent of these changes, a clear and
consistent pattern of Māori being over-represented in IPV
emerges.
In the first study, the lifetime
prevalence rate of Māori women experiencing IPV was 26.9%
compared with a rate of 14.6% for New Zealand European women
(Young et al. 1997). The rates were 11.9% for Māori males
and 6.8% for New Zealand European males. The second national
crime survey indicated that 49.3% of Māori women and 22.2%
of New Zealand European women had experienced IPV (Morris et
al. 2003). The lifetime prevalence rate for Māori males was
27.5% and the corresponding rate for New Zealand European
males 18.4%. The most recent contribution to this series
used the term “confrontational offences” (mainly
assaults and threats) and differentiated types of offending
by the degree of intimacy between the respondent and
offender (Mayhew and Reilly 2007). The results indicate an
uneven distribution of vulnerability between ethnic groups,
with Māori experiencing more than 50% higher than the
average victimisation risk for offending by partners.
This pattern of Māori disproportionately
represented in IPV is also observable from information
derived from alternative sources. For example, although
Māori make up only 15% of the New Zealand population, 50%
of those sentenced for the offence “male assaults
female” were Māori men (Doone 2000). In addition, it has
been estimated that close to 50% of Women’s Refuge
clientele are Māori women and children (New Zealand Family
Violence Clearinghouse 2007). Other research reporting
specifically on ethnic group differences in exposure to IPV
or related trauma appears to corroborate the finding that
both Māori men and women are at an inordinate risk of
experiencing IPV when compared to other sub-groups of the
population classified by ethnicity (Kazantzis et al. 2000,
Koziol-Mclain et al. 2004, Flett et al. 2004, Hirini et al.
2005, Koziol-Mclain et al. 2007, Lievore et al. 2007).
• Official Information Act Data:
Over half (54% in 2009) of all convictions for
violent offences against children are committed by Maori,
24% by European/Pakeha and 19% by Pacific Islanders. On
these statistics, Asian families are significantly under
represented. That there is a particular violence problem
within the Maori culture is not a new finding and has been
commented upon for more than a generation. But these
statistics suggest that it is not getting better – it is
getting worse and especially for Maori children.
•
Maori Youth Offending: Paper Addressing Some Introductory
Issues By His Honour Judge A J Becroft, Principal Youth
Court Judge
Māori youth offenders
make up around 50% of all youth offenders but in some Youth
Courts the figure is as high as 80% or 90% - despite Māori
encompassing only about a quarter of the New Zealand
population under 17 years of age.2 This situation is deeply
concerning to everyone involved in youth justice.
I have many other examples, however I
would argue that your premise (assuming you have been
reported correctly) is fundamentally false, although I am
happy for you to provide me with literature that
demonstrates that :there was no difference between Maori
and Pakeha parents in terms of violence”.
Kind Regards,
Steve Taylor | B. Couns., B. Alc.
D.S. | Cert. Clinical Supervision | Cert. Supervisory
Management
Director 24-7 Ltd