1 hr 3 min

Ep 61 - Navigating Change through Hautū Waka, with Ayla Hoeta Beyond Consultation

    • Government

Introducing Ayla Hoeta

Ayla Hoeta is a kaiāwhina - a Lecturer - with Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland. She’s a māmā of two teenage sons, with whākapapa roots connected to the south of Tāmaki Makaurau.

Carrying a deep understanding of racial segregation, poverty and the inequality rooted in Aotearoa, Ayla has sought to heal the generational wounds ingrained into our tangata whenua - the people of our land - by connecting to her identity.

As part of this healing, Ayla has helped to develop a framework called Hautū Waka; a navigational framework rooted in mātauranga Māori that you can use to help navigate complexity.

Hautū Waka encourages us to switch our thinking from human-centred design to whānau and whakapapa-centred design; rooting our decisions in ancient knowledge.

Also in today's episode, we dive deep into what it means to be a good Treaty partner and the true effects of subtle racism in the workplace.

In today's episode you'll learn:


What it means to be a good Treaty partner
What you can do when you encounter racism in the workplace (because… yes, you will)
The deeper meaning behind the word whānau (it’s more than just a nuclear family of 2.4 kids and a dog)
Hautū Waka - What is the framework? Where did it spring from? How can you use it?

Resources mentioned in this episode:


The Hautū Waka framework
The Southern Initiative from Auckland Council.
Upsouth innovative youth engagement programme. 

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Sign up to our fortnightly newsletter and get the insights, tools and powerful whakaaro from people transforming the collaboration space.


---

Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beyondconsultation/message

Introducing Ayla Hoeta

Ayla Hoeta is a kaiāwhina - a Lecturer - with Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland. She’s a māmā of two teenage sons, with whākapapa roots connected to the south of Tāmaki Makaurau.

Carrying a deep understanding of racial segregation, poverty and the inequality rooted in Aotearoa, Ayla has sought to heal the generational wounds ingrained into our tangata whenua - the people of our land - by connecting to her identity.

As part of this healing, Ayla has helped to develop a framework called Hautū Waka; a navigational framework rooted in mātauranga Māori that you can use to help navigate complexity.

Hautū Waka encourages us to switch our thinking from human-centred design to whānau and whakapapa-centred design; rooting our decisions in ancient knowledge.

Also in today's episode, we dive deep into what it means to be a good Treaty partner and the true effects of subtle racism in the workplace.

In today's episode you'll learn:


What it means to be a good Treaty partner
What you can do when you encounter racism in the workplace (because… yes, you will)
The deeper meaning behind the word whānau (it’s more than just a nuclear family of 2.4 kids and a dog)
Hautū Waka - What is the framework? Where did it spring from? How can you use it?

Resources mentioned in this episode:


The Hautū Waka framework
The Southern Initiative from Auckland Council.
Upsouth innovative youth engagement programme. 

Sign up for the Movement Makers newsletter

Sign up to our fortnightly newsletter and get the insights, tools and powerful whakaaro from people transforming the collaboration space.


---

Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beyondconsultation/message

1 hr 3 min

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