TY - BOOK AU - Hutchings,Jessica AU - Smith,Jo TI - Te Mahi Oneone Hua Parakore =: A Māori soil sovereignty and wellbeing handbook SN - 9780473516192 AV - S599.75 T4 2020 U1 - 631.4510993 23 PY - 2020/// CY - Christchurch, New Zealand PB - Harvest: Fresh Scholarship from the Field KW - Soil conservation KW - New Zealand KW - Māori (New Zealand people) KW - Social life and customs KW - Ahu whenua KW - reo KW - Whenua rāhui KW - Mana whenua KW - Kaitiakitanga N1 - Harvest: Fresh Scholarship from the Field is a Freerange Press imprint; Includes bibliographical references; He Mihi -- Introduction -- -Part One: Frameworks for understanding Te Mahi Oneone Hu Pakrakore -- Chapter One: Building a Rauemi Hua Parakore for Understanding Soil Health and Wellbeing / By Jessica Hutchings and Jo Smith -- Chapter Two: Oneone Ora, Tangata Ora: Soils and Māori Health and Wellbeing / By Garth Harmsworth -- Chapter Three: Māori Soil Sovereignty: Advocating for the Rights of Our Ancestral Soils / By Jessica Hutchings -- Chapter Four: Nāku Koe i Whāngai (It was I that brought you up) / By Nick Roskruge -- Part two: Oneone Ora, Tangata Ora: Māori soil heroes -- Chapter Five: A Vision for Soil and Food-Growing with Maanu Paul / By Kiri Reihana Spraggs -- Chapter Six: Ngāhuia Lena: Kaitiaki of Moroiti / By Teina Boasa-Dean and Ruth Nesi Bryce-Hare -- Chapter Seven: Te Wharekura o Maniapoto: Kura ā-Iwi - Educating the Community / By Yvonne Taura -- Chapter Eight: Ruia Ngā Purapura: Sowing the Seeds / By Antoine Coffin -- Chapter Nine: Whare Uku: Living in a Home Made of Papatūānuku / By Helen Potter -- Chapter Ten: Wellbeing Through Homeopathy / By Jo Smith -- Chapter Eleven: Pounamu Among the Rocks: Papatūānuku Kōkiri Marae / By Jo Smith -- Chapter Twelve: Tātai Tangata ki te Whenua / By Kiri Reihana Spraggs -- Chapter Thirteen: Ko te Kai he Rongoā, ko te Rongoā he Kai: A Kōrero About Kai, Motherhood, Soil and Wellbeing / By Gretta Carney with Jo Smith N2 - "Soil health and security are key components of our wellbeing. Even so, soil is faced with many environmental challenges under the current iteration of capitalism. A paradigm shift is needed to encourage care for this resource. In te ao Māori, soil is taonga. It is also whanaunga - it holds ancestral connections and is the root of tūrangawaewae and whakapapa. It is the source of shelter, kai and manaakitanga.Te Mahi Oneone Hua Parakore: A Māori Soil Sovereignty and Wellbeing Handbook shines a light on Māori relationships with soil, as well as the connections between soil and food security, and frames these links within the wider discourse of tino rangatiratanga from a variety of Māori perspectives. Through a range of essays, profiles and recipes, it seeks to promote wellbeing and elevate the mana of the soil by drawing on the hua parakore Māori organics framework as a means for understanding these wide-ranging, diverse and interwoven relationships with soil"--Provided by publisher ER -