TY - BOOK AU - Nairn,R.G. ED - New Zealand Psychological Society TI - Ka tū, ka oho: visions of a bicultural partnership in psychology : invited keynotes : revisiting the past to reset the future SN - 047320665X U1 - 150.993 23 PY - 2012///] CY - [Wellington, N.Z.] PB - New Zealand Psychological Society KW - Psychology KW - New Zealand KW - Biculturalism KW - Whakamātau hinengaro KW - reo KW - Tikanga rua N1 - Includes bibliographical references; Colonisation continues and affects all people. Interface of gender and culture / Taimalieutu Kiwi Tamasese, 1993. Identity, nationhood and implications for practice in New Zealand / Mason Durie, 1997. Psychology becoming bicultural - Māori keynote addresses : was there something we missed? / Raymond Nairn, 2004. Mā hea (which way?) Mō te aha (what for?) Too many questions, not enough answers, for Māori on the march / Ngahuia Te Awekotuku, 2004 -- There must be better ways - evaluating changes. On being culturally sensitive, the art of gathering and eating kina without pricking yourself on the finger / Linda Tuhiwai Smith, 1989. Challenges of culture to psychology - post-modern thinking / Charles Waldegrave, 1993. Kaupapa Māori research, epidemiology and Māori mental health : challenges, opportunities and insights / Joanna Baxter, 2005 -- Te Ao Māori and psychology. Psychology at the interface / Mason Durie, 2003. Culture - thinking, doing and meaning / Te Maire Tau, 2002. A modern view of mana / Te Ahukaramū Charles Royal, 2006. Engaging and working with Māori? Effective practice for psychologists in education / Ted Glynn, 2007 -- Practising better. Rangatiratanga and Kāwanatanga - resetting our future / Linda Waimarie Nikora, 2000. Māori-centred research and clinical training programmes in Aotearoa/New Zealand / Averil Herbert, 2001. Kia hiwa rā! Listen to culture : a counter narrative to standard assessment practices in psychology / Angus Macfarlane, 2008. Challenging and countering anti-Māori discourse : practices for decolonisation / Tim McCreanor, 2009 N2 - This book contains 20 years of bicultural keynote addresses given to the New Zealand Psychological Society at its annual conference. Raymond Nairn returned to these speakers and asked them to reflect on their keynote addresses then and now ER -