Lady Tureiti Moxon
Ngāti Pāhauwera, Ngāti Kahungunu, Kāi Tahu
- National Urban Māori Authority Chair
- Te Aka Whai Ora Māori Health Authority interim board member (2021)
Ngāti Pāhauwera, Ngāti Kahungunu, Kāi Tahu
“Move fast and break things” could be the motto of our current health leaders as every week brings a shocking new headline – why do they seem to be dismantling the health system?
What’s next? Privatisation?
What does it mean for Māori healthcare, women’s healthcare and public healthcare – and what could we do differently?
“one of our nation’s shining Hauora stars” – NZ Herald on Lady Moxon
Join two incredible experts in an important community kōrero on what’s rapidly unfolding: the inimitable Lady Tureiti Moxon – whose Waitangi Tribunal advocacy ultimately led to the landmark Wai 2575 report which recommended the Māori Health Authority (now abolished by the National-led government) – and the exceptional Dr Elana Curtis, whose research into the importance of cultural safety is world-leading.
“…the basic drivers of Māori health inequities [include] poverty, racism and Pākehā privilege. [Addressing these] will require radical shifts away from the current “business as usual” model so that Māori have control over the health services to be funded and the way in which they should be delivered.” – Dr Elana Curtis, 2021
All genders welcome, NZSL interpreters provided. This event will be livestreamed via our Facebook page, and a high quality video version will be uploaded to YouTube in the days following the event.
(Ngāi Tahu, Te Arawa)
Award-winning broadcaster, author and advocate for te reo Māori.
“The forum was loving, challenging, honest, heartfelt and relational. Perfect and left me feeling positive about change and possibilities and hope in lessening the harm that happens for wahine Māori”
“Excellent session in every way. The kōrero was smart, powerful and totally accessible; it was filled with wisdom and warmth in equal measure. Ka pai and ngā mihi nui”
“This really was a wonderful event, with inspirational wāhine toa and packed full of real life experience insights and wisdom. Ka mau te wehi! Many thanks to all involved”
Which ticket price should I select?
We want everybody to be able to come to our events, and hope you’ll help us with this. We use a sliding scale to take into account different levels of financial well-being, so those of us who can, “pay forward” so those of us who are on a low income can also attend without stress. As a gauge, we expect that people in full time employment without dependents would pay the full amount to assist us, and people in part-time employment pay somewhere closer to the mid-range. It’s appropriate for students and benefit recipients to pay closer to the base end of the scale.