Māori, justice, and the 20th Century

IGPS Senior Associate Len Cook puts a spotlight on how complex population dynamics have affected the experience each generation of Maori has had with State custody.

Lectures, talks and seminars

Old Government Building LT3 (GBLT3)

Presented by


Description

The demographic transformation of the Māori population over the 20th century resulted in its place, level, structure, and growth changing from decade to decade, placing population driven services including education, health, housing, and justice in a continual state of reaction. In this talk, IGPS Senior Associate Len Cook puts a spotlight on how this complex population dynamic has affected the experience each generation of Maori has had with State custody.

To our shame, the rate of incarceration of adult Māori males places them amongst the world’s most incarcerated populations. The highest rate of State custody experienced in the last seventy years by any age group of Maori occurred during the 1970s and 1980s, when some seven percent of Māori boys had been placed in State custody. The long reach of the policies of the 1970s into the present can be contrasted with the last 15 years, which have seen reduced rates of imprisonment in some age bands. This puts a spotlight on the tension between welfare and penal policies, rehabilitation, the strength of whanau centred support, and the continued change in social and demographic structures.


Speaker Bios

From 1992 to 2000 Len Cook was Government Statistician of New Zealand, after working in Statistics New Zealand in a variety of roles from 1971 to 2000, and from 2000 to 2005 was National Statistician of the United Kingdom and Registrar-General of England and Wales.


Free registration via RSVP to igps@vuw.ac.nz

For more information contact: David Larsen

igps@vuw.ac.nz 04 463 6746