2,404
Views
3
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Ethnicity, racism and housing: discourse analysis of New Zealand housing research

&
Pages 1331-1349 | Received 16 May 2020, Accepted 20 Oct 2020, Published online: 18 Nov 2020

References

  • Agozino, B. (2003) Counter-colonial Criminology: A Critque of Imperialist Reason (London, UK: Pluto Press).
  • Alexander, M. (2012) The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colourblindness (New York, NY: New Press).
  • Andrai, D., McIntosh, T. & Coster, S. (2017) Marginalised: An insider’s view of the state. State policies in New Zealand and gang formation, Critical Criminology, 25, pp. 119–135.
  • Aniefuna, L. I., Aniefuna, M. A. & Williams, J. M. (2020) Creating and undoing legacies of resilience: Black women as martyrs in the Black community under oppressive social control, Women & Criminal Justice, 30, pp. 356–373. https://doi.org/10.1080/08974454.2020.1752352
  • Awatere, D. (1984) Maori Sovereignty (Auckland: Broadsheet).
  • Banivanua Mar, T. (2016) Decolonisation and the Pacific: Indigenous Globalisation and the Ends of Empire (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press).
  • Bartholomew, R. E. (2020) No Maori Allowed: New Zealand’s Forgotten History of Racial Segregation. Independently Published.
  • Bledsoe, A. & Wright, W. J. (2019) The anti-Blackness of global capital, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 37, pp. 8–26.
  • Bonds, A. (2019) Race and ethnicity I: Property, race, and the carceral state, Progress in Human Geography, 43, pp. 574–583.
  • Bonilla-Silva, E. (2000) ‘This is a white country’: The racial ideology of the Western nations of the world-system, Sociological Inquiry, 70, pp. 188–214.
  • Bonilla-Silva, E. (2006) Racism without Racists: Colour-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States, 2nd ed. (Oxford, UK: Rowman & Littlefield).
  • Bonilla-Silva, E. (2015) The structure of racism in color-blind, ‘Post-racial’ America, American Behavioral Scientist, 59, pp. 1358–1376.
  • Bonilla-Silva, E. (2019) Racist, class anxieties, hegemonic racism, and democracy in Trump’s, America. Social Currents, 6, pp. 14–31.
  • Bourassa, S. C. & Shi, S. (2017) Understanding New Zealand’s decline in homeownership, Housing Studies, 32, pp. 693–710.
  • Collins, P. H. (2000) Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment, 2nd ed. (New York: Routledge).
  • Collins, P. H. (2013) On Intellectual Activism (Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press).
  • Cowen, D. & Lewis, N. (2016) Anti-Blackness and urban geopolitical economy. Society & Space. Available at https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/anti-blackness-and-urbangeopolitical-economy (accessed 11 May 2020)
  • Crenshaw, K. (1991) Mapping the margins: Intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color, Stanford Law Review, 43, pp. 1241–1299.
  • Cunneen, C. & Tauri, J. (2017) Indigenous Criminology (Bristol, UK: Policy Press).
  • Daniels, G. R. (2014) Unfinished business: Protecting voting rights in the twenty-first century, The George Washington Law Review, 81, pp. 1928–1965.
  • Daniels, G. R. (2020) Uncounted: The Crisis of Voter Suppression in America (New York, NY: NYU Press).
  • Davey, J. A. & Kearns, R. A. (1994) Special needs versus the ‘level playing-field’: Recent developments in housing policy for Indigenous people in New Zealand, Journal of Rural Studies, 10, pp. 73–82.
  • Davey, J. A. & Kearns, R. A. (1995) Economic restructuring, housing policy and Maori housing in Northland, New Zealand. Geoforum, 26, pp. 325–336.
  • Davis, A. (1995/1971). Reflections on the Black woman’s role in the community of slaves, in: B. Guy-Sheftall (Ed) Words of Fire: An Anthology of African-American Feminist Thought, pp. 200–218 (New York, NY: The New Press).
  • Davis, A. Y. (1997) Race and criminalization: Black Americans and the punishment industry, in: L. Wahneema (Ed) The House that Race Built, pp. 264–279 (New York, NY: Random House).
  • Deckert, A. (2014) Neo-colonial criminology: Quantifying silence, African Journal of Criminology and Justice Studies, 8, pp. 39–60.
  • Department of Corrections (2018). Where New Zealand stands internationally: A comparison of offence profiles and recidivism rates. Available at https://www.corrections.govt.nz/resources/research_and_statistics/journal/volume_6_issue_1_july_2018/where_new_zealand_stands_internationally_a_comparison_of_offence_profiles_and_recidivism_rates (accessed 5 November 2020)
  • van Dijk, T. (1997) The study of discourse, in: T. A. van Dijk (Ed) Discourse as Structure and Process, pp. 1–34 (London: Sage).
  • Eaqub, S. & Eaqub, S. (2015) Generation Rent: Rethinking New Zealand’s Priorities (Wellington, NZ: Bridget Williams Books).
  • Gatewood, B. J. & Norris, A. N. (2019) Silencing prisoner protests: Criminology, black women and state-sanctioned violence, Decolonization of Criminology and Justice, 1, pp. 52–77.
  • Gibbons, A. (2018) City of Segregation: 100 Years of Struggle for Housing in Los Angeles (Brooklyn, NY: Verso).
  • Goldberg, D. T. (2002) The Racial State (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley).
  • Goodyear, R. (2017) A place to call home? Declining Home-ownership rates for Maori and Pacific peoples in New Zealand, New Zealand Population Review, 43, pp. 3–14.
  • Gurney, C. (1999) Lowering the drawbridge: A case study of analogy and metaphor in the social construction of home-ownership, Urban Studies, 36, pp. 1705–1722.
  • Hargis, P. G. (1998) Beyond the marginality thesis: The acquisition and loss of land by African Americans in Georgia, 1880-1930, Agricultural History, 72, pp. 241–262.
  • Harris, C. I. (1993) Whiteness as property, Harvard Law Review, 106, pp. 1707–1791.
  • Hastings, A. (2000) Discourse analysis: What does it offer housing studies?, Housing, Theory and Society, 17, pp. 131–139.
  • Hattery, A. J. & Smith, E. (2018) Policing Black Bodies: How Black Lives Are Surveilled and How to Work for Change (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield).
  • Higgins, K. & Turruhn, J. (2020) Kinship, whiteness and the politics of belonging among white British migrants and Pākehā in Aotearoa/New Zealand, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, pp. 1–20.
  • Hosang, D. M. & Lowndes, J. E. (2019) Producers Parasites, Patriots: Race and the New Right-Wing Politics of Precarity (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press).
  • Houkamau, C. A. & Sibley, C. (2015) Looking Māori predicts decreased rate of home ownership: Institutional racism in housing based on perceived appearance, PLoS One, 10, pp. e0118540. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118540.
  • Institute on Metropolitan Opportunity (2009). Communities in crisis: Race and mortgage lending in the Twin Cities. University of Minnesota Law School.
  • Inwood, J. F. J. & Bonds, A. (2017) Property and whiteness: The Oregon standoff and the contradictions of the U.S. Settler State, Space and Polity, 21, pp. 253–268.
  • Jackson, M. (1988) The Maori and the Criminal Justice System, a New Perspective: He Whaipaang Hou (Wellington: Department of Justice).
  • Jacobs, K. & Manzi, T. (1996) Discourse and policy change: The significance of language for housing research, Housing Studies, 11, pp. 543–560.
  • Kelling, G. L. & Wilson, J. Q. (1982) Broken windows: The police and neighbourhood safety. The Atlantic, March.
  • Kemeny, J. (1999) Narratives, Sagas and Social Policy-State and Society in Housing Research. Working paper 24 (Gavle: Institute for Housing Research, Uppsala University).
  • Kitossa, T. (2012) Criminology and colonialism: Counter colonial criminology and the Canadian context, The Journal of Pan African Studies, 4, pp. 204–226.
  • Kwaymullina, A. (2016) Research, ethics and Indigenous peoples: An Australian Indigenous perspective on three threshold considerations for respectful engagement, AlterNative, 12, pp. 437–449.
  • Lewis, C., Norris, A., Heta-Cooper, W. & Tauri, J. (2020) Stigmatising gang narratives, housing and the social policing of Māori women, in L. George, A. Norris, J. Tauri, & A. Deckert (Eds) Neo-Colonial Injustice and the Mass Imprisonment of Indigenous Women, pp. 19–32 (Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan).
  • Madden, D. & Marcuse, P. (2016) In Defense of Housing (Brooklyn, NY: Verso).
  • McCabe, B. J. (2018) Why buy a home? Race, ethnicity, and homeownership preferences in the United States, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 4, pp. 452–472.
  • McIntosh, T. & Workman, K. (2017) Māori and prison, in: A. Deckert & R. Sarre (Eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice, pp. 725–736 (Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan).
  • Miller, R. J. (2014) Devolving the carceral state: Race, prisoner re-entry, and the micro-politics of urban poverty management, Punishment & Society, 16, pp. 305–335.
  • Moreton-Robinson, A. (2015) The White Possessive: Property, Power, and Indigenous Sovereignty (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press).
  • Munro, M. (2018) House price inflation in the news: A critical discourse analysis of newspaper coverage in the UK, Housing Studies, 33, pp. 1085–1105.
  • Norris, A. N. (2019) Are we really colour-blind? The normalisation of mass female incarceration, Race and Justice, 9, pp. 454–478.
  • Norris, A. N. & Billings, J. (2017) Colorblind ideology, mass incarceration, and controlling racial images: An intersectional analysis of presidential rhetoric from 1969-1996, Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice, 15, pp. 78–98.
  • Norris, A. N. & Lipsey, K. (2018) Public attitudes toward new prisons in New Zealand and deficit narratives: A quantitative survey, International Criminal Justice Review, Online First, 29, pp. 1–13. doi.org/
  • Oshinsky, D. M. (1997) Worse than Slavery: Parchman Farm and the Ordeal of Jim Crow Justice (New York, NY: Free Press).
  • Pratt, J. (2017) New Zealand penal policy in the twenty-first century, in: A. Deckert & R. Sarre (Eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice, pp. 347–362 (Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan).
  • Quijano, A. (2007) Coloniality and modernity/rationality, Cultural Studies, 21, pp. 168–178.
  • Reid, D. A. (2003) African Americans and land loss in Texas: Government duplicity and discrimination based on race and class, Agricultural History, 77, pp. 258–293.
  • Ritchie, A. J. (2017) Invisible no More: Police Violence against Black Women and Women of Color (Boston, MA: Beacon Press).
  • Ross, L. (1998) Inventing the Savage: The Social Construction of Native American Criminality (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press).
  • Rothstein, R. (2017) The Color of the Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America (New York, NY: Liveright Publishing Corporation).
  • Smith, A. M. (2015) Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide (Durham, NC: Duke University Press).
  • Smith, L. T. (2012) Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples, 2nd ed. (Dunedin, NZ: Otago University Press).
  • Statistics New Zealand (2016) Changes in home - ownership patterns in New Zealand 1986 – 2013 with a particular focus on Māori and Pacific people. Available at www.stats.govt.nz.
  • Taylor, K. (2019) Race for Profit: Black Homeownership and the End of the Urban Crisis (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press).
  • Wacquant, L. (2001) Deadly symbiosis: When ghetto and prison meet and mesh, Punishment & Society, 3, pp. 95–133.
  • Walker, R. (2004) Ka whawhai tonu matou: Struggle without End (North Shore, NZ: Penguin Books).
  • Walker, R. & Barcham, M. (2010) Indigenous-inclusive citizenship: The city and social housing in Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. Environmental and Planning A, 42, pp. 314–331.
  • Wanhalla, A. (2006) Housing un/healthy bodies: Native housing surveys and Maori health in New Zealand, 1930-45, Health and History, 8, pp. 100–120.
  • Webb, R. (2017) Maori experiences of colonisation and Maori criminology, in: A. Deckert & R. Sarre (Eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Australian and New Zealand Criminology, Crime and Justice, pp. 683–696 (Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan).
  • White, I. & Nandedkar, G. (2019) The housing crisis as an ideological artefact: Analysing how political discourse defines, diagnoses, and responds, Housing Studies, pp. 1–22.
  • Williams, V. (2017) Activist says voter suppression is a ‘greater threat to U.S. democracy than Russian election tampering.’ The Washington Post, June 23. Available at https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/postnation/wp/2017/06/23/activist-says-voter-suppression-is-a-greater-threat-to-u-sdemocracy-than-russian-election-tampering/?utm_term=.2cd34236950e (accessed 3 March 2020).
  • Wylie, C. (2013) Schools and Inequality, in: M. Rashbrooke (Ed) Inequality: A New Zealand Crisis, pp 137–148 (Wellington, NZ: Bridget Williams Books).

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.