White Mothers, Brown Children: Ethnic Identification of Maori-European Children in New ZealandPosted in Articles, Media Archive, Oceania, Social Science on 2011-01-25 02:56Z by Steven |
White Mothers, Brown Children: Ethnic Identification of Maori-European Children in New Zealand
Journal of Marriage and Family
Volume 69, Issue 5 (December 2007)
pages 1150–1161
DOI: 10.1111/j.1741-3737.2007.00438.x
Tahu H. Kukutai, Senior Research Fellow
Population Studies Centre
University of Waikato
Studies of multiethnic families often assume the ethnic identification of children with the minority group results from the minority parent. This study examines an alternate view that mainstream parents also play an important role in transmitting minority ethnicity. It explores this argument using data from New Zealand on the ethnic labels mothers assign to their Māori-European children. It finds that European mothers are just as disposed as Māori mothers to designate their child as Māori, either exclusively or in combination. Two explanations, grounded in ethnic awareness and gendered inheritance, are proposed. Although neither satisfactorily predicts maternal designation decisions, the readiness of European mothers to identify their child as Maori underscores their role in diffusing Māori ethnicity.
Read or purchase the article here.