ACADEMY OF MARXISM CHINESE ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
中文
Home>English>Scholars’ Profiles
Culture versus Class: Towards an Understanding of Māori Poverty
     Release time: 2020-09-18

 

 

Toon van Meijl

 

 

Abstract

Interrogating why class has been demoted as a useful concept within anthropology, the author examines the ways in which issues of inequality and ethnicity have been used to explain both the enduring impact of settler colonialism on, and contemporary forms of discrimination against, New Zealand Māori. He weighs up the impact of the cultural turn in academia, the Māori Renaissance, the impact of neoliberalism, and the assumption that class coincides with ethnicity and hence the emphasis on affirmative action in education. The assumption that poverty is either class- or ethnicity-based is false. Māori themselves have been affected by social change: a few making it into a middle class, while, despite growing intermarriage, identification as Māori, appears enhanced by both enduring poverty and racism.

 

Keywords

Class, culture, educational achievement, ethnicity, inequality, intersectionality, New Zealand Māori, poverty, Treaty of Waitangi

 

From: Race & Class 2020 62 (1)

Editor: Wang Yi

 

Related Articles