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Maori Women and Positional Segregation in New Zealand Netball: Another Test of the Anglocentric Hypothesis

Merrill J. Melnick

In order to test Hallinan’s “Anglocentric Hypothesis,” New Zealand head coaches of female netball union teams completed two mailed questionnaires. The statistical analysis was based on 177 European (69.1%) and 79 Maori (30.9%) players. An overall chi-square for Race x Playing Position was nonsignificant, χ2(6) = 8.40. Specifically, Europeans were nonsignificantly overrepresented at center, the most central, highest interacting position. Occupancy of the most tactically important playing position, goal defense, also did not significantly vary by race. Lastly, goal shoot, the position judged by the coaches as being highest in outcome control, also did not favor either race. The results are discussed in terms of the historical record of Maori women’s participation in netball, majority–minority relations in New Zealand, and several methodological issues and concerns that attend “stacking” investigations.

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The Mäori All Blacks and the Decentering of the White Subject: Hyperrace, Sport, and the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism

Brendan Hokowhitu and Jay Scherer

In this article we examine a range of media discourses surrounding the continued existence of the Mäori All Blacks, a “racially” selected rugby side, and a specific public controversy that erupted in New Zealand over the selection of former All Black great Christian Cullen for the Mäori All Blacks in 2003. Having never played for the Mäori All Blacks or publicly identified as Mäori, Cullen claimed tangata whenua status via whakapapa (genealogical connection) to his Ngäi Tahu grandfather. We argue that Cullen’s selection emerged as a contentious issue because of the fragmentation that the inclusion of his “Whiteness” within the confines of “an Other” team (i.e., the Mäori All Blacks) brought to bear on traditional colonial binaries of race in the context of late capitalism. Finally, we locate the debates over Cullen’s selection and the continued existence of the Mäori All Blacks in relation to the current racialized political climate that has fueled a Right-wing reaction to the growing Mäori self-determination movement.

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Decolonizing Sport Science: High Performance Sport, Indigenous Cultures, and Women's Rugby

Holly Thorpe, Julie Brice, and Anna Rolleston

physiological tests (blood work, RMR, DEXA scans, and nutritional diaries) with qualitative interviews, to study the complex pathology of the health condition known as Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S). 2 As the project evolved, culturally important themes emerged from the interviews with Māori and

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Sport for Social Change With Aotearoa New Zealand Youth: Navigating the Theory–Practice Nexus Through Indigenous Principles

Jeremy Hapeta, Rochelle Stewart-Withers, and Farah Palmer

in sport-for-development (SFD) research, this study demonstrates how such perspectives can provide important insights for the SFD field. We argue that, from our perspective as Māori (Indigenous people to NZ) scholars, there cannot be a universal theory; however, there is some universality of

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Decolonizing Sports Sociology is a “Verb not a Noun”: Indigenizing Our Way to Reconciliation and Inclusion in the 21st Century? Alan Ingham Memorial Lecture

Paul Whitinui

colonization. In 2003, a renowned Indigenous Māori scholar—Professor Graham Hingangaroa Smith from Aotearoa New Zealand—argued that transforming leadership in the academy is as much an exercise in critical literacy as it is about engaging multiple sites of the struggle—constitutionally, nationally, locally

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Sport, Promotional Culture and the Crisis of Masculinity

Janelle Joseph

masculinity: the “Southern Man”; (4) the explicitly hypermasculine theme of the rebranded National Hockey League’s 2005-2006 “Inside the Warrior” advertising campaign; and (5) the iconic Ma¯ori ritualized physical cultural practice, the haka , best known globally through New Zealand’s national rugby team and

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Intertwining Influences on Perceptions of Risk, Pain, and Injury in Sport: A Close Study of a Chinese New Immigrant Mother–Daughter Pair

Lucen Liu and Liyun Wendy Choo

113-min joint interview with the mother–daughter pair. Thus, in contrast to the rest of the data collected as part of A1’s doctoral work ( Liu, 2018 ), which focused broadly on how female Chinese table tennis players and female Māori waka ama paddlers make sense of risk, pain, and injury, this joint

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Sport, Nationalism, and the Narration of Cultural Scripts: The Death of Colin Meads and the New Zealand Imagination

Mark Falcous and Lauren Turner

arena challenged the monolithic archetype ( Phillips, 1987 ). Simultaneously, an indigenous Mãori resurgence (with political, economic, and cultural dimensions); fading imperial ties; neoliberal economics; and feminist gains unsettled the previously stable place of Pākehā masculinity at the center of

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Opportunities Denied: The Divergent Resonance of Opportunity for Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Hockey Players With the Now-Disbanded Beardy’s Blackhawks

Mika Rathwell, Robert Henry, and Sam McKegney

problematized these prevailing myths. In their study with Māori rugby players in New Zealand, Hippolite and Bruce suggested that although the increased visibility of elite Māori athletes over the years has reinforced the “broader societal belief in sport as a site of positive racial opportunity and race

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Indigenous Gender Reformations: Physical Culture, Settler Colonialism and the Politics of Containment

Moss E. Norman, Michael Hart, and LeAnne Petherick

constructions of heteropatriarchy masquerading as universal ideals of liberal humanism are neither frozen in the past, nor are they merely enforced on Indigenous peoples from the outside. On this point, Ngäti Pukenga Maori scholar, Brendan Hokowhitu ( 2015 ), has cautioned that what in many instances have