Mō Mātou

About the Team

This kaupapa Māori research team brings together deep academic expertise, methodological innovation, and lived experience of disability. Most members are tāngata whaikaha Māori or closely connected through whānau, ensuring authenticity and cultural integrity in all aspects of the work. Collectively, the team has over five decades of engagement with Māori disability communities, alongside international leadership in survey methodology, political science, health research, and Indigenous data sovereignty.

Collective Team Statement

The team’s strengths lie in:
- Kaupapa Māori research and tikanga whaikaha Māori frameworks for equity-driven inquiry.
- Survey design and analysis at scale, including national probability-based online panels.
- Community partnerships and translational impact, ensuring findings are meaningful for whānau, iwi, providers, and policymakers.
- Governance and advocacy roles that connect directly into government, health systems, and international disability rights mechanisms.

Together, this capability underpins Te Niwha’s mission to deliver world-class, culturally grounded, and statistically robust research for pandemic preparedness, infectious disease response, and beyond.

Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāti Porou
QUALIFICATIONS
FNZCPHM (Hon), MBChB (Otago), MRSNZ, MinstD, MIAP2
AFFILIATIONS
Department of Medicine, University of Otago Wellington | Foundation for Equity & Research New Zealand
Principal Investigator

Associate Professor Tristram Ingham is a public health physician, academic researcher, and disability advocate based at the University of Otago, Wellington. He is the Co-Director of the Te Ao Mārama Māori Health and Wellbeing Panel and Executive Lead of FERNZ – the Foundation for Equity Research New Zealand. His research and leadership centre on health equity, Māori and tāngata whaikaha Māori wellbeing, and the application of kaupapa Māori and human rights frameworks in policy and systems design. Dr Ingham has played a leading role in national disability and Māori health governance, including as Co-Chair of the Establishment Partnership Group for Whaikaha – Ministry of Disabled People, and as a member of the Royal Commission on Abuse in Care Disability Reference Group. He has extensive experience working at the interface of government, iwi, and the health sector to advance Te Tiriti o Waitangi obligations and uphold Māori data sovereignty. As Principal Investigator for the Te Ao Mārama Panel, he provides strategic oversight of study design, governance, and data kaitiakitanga. His work seeks to transform evidence systems so that Māori voices, experiences, and aspirations shape the policies that affect their lives — building a fairer, healthier Aotearoa for future generations.

ORCiD
Ngā Wairiki, Ngāti Apa
QUALIFICATIONS
MPH (Otago), PGDipPH (Otago), RGON, MIAP2
AFFILIATIONS
Department of Medicine, University of Otago Wellington | Foundation for Equity & Research New Zealand
Co-Principal Investigator

Bernadette is a Māori health researcher and registered nurse with lived experience of disability. Her research focuses on long-term conditions such as asthma and COPD disproportionately affecting Māori whānau. She has led multiple HRC-funded projects and is recognised for her ability to translate evidence into improved access and equity for tāngata whaikaha. She maintains strong community and professional networks nationally, building high-trust, co-productive teams. In Te Niwha, she co leads project governance, ensuring that research outcomes are grounded in Māori realities and deliver tangible whānau benefits.

ORCiD
QUALIFICATIONS
PhD, MManipTh (Dist), BPhty
AFFILIATIONS
School of Physiotherapy, University of Otago

Meredith is a physiotherapist and researcher with mixed-methods expertise in accessible environments and disability research. Her lived experience as the mother of two disabled children shapes her commitment to dismantling systemic barriers in health and education. She is active in disability NGOs including the Blind Foundation and ParaFed. In Te Niwha she is supporting Project Management, design, and data interpretation. Meredith contributes to qualitative and quantitative analysis, engagement with disability organisations, and dissemination of academic outputs.

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Te Aūpouri, Te Rarawa, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Whātua, Waikato-Tainui, Ngāti Maniapoto
QUALIFICATIONS
PhD, FNZCPHM, MPH, PGDipPH, PGDipCH, MBChB, BMus, BHB
AFFILIATIONS

Paula is a public health physician and researcher whose work spans Māori health inequities, Indigenous rights, and systemic transformation. She has provided strategic leadership on multiple national initiatives at the Crown–Māori interface. Within Te Niwha, Paula strengthens the team’s capacity in clinical epidemiology, Māori health equity frameworks, and translation of findings into public policy.

ORCiD
Ngāti Apa, Rangitane, Te Rarawa
QUALIFICATIONS
PGDipPH, MA, BA
AFFILIATIONS
Department of Statistics, University of Auckland | iNZight Analytics Ltd

Andrew is a senior Māori statistician and founding member of Te Mana Raraunga (Māori Data Sovereignty Network). He has over two decades’ experience leading innovations in official statistics, including the NZ Census Mortality Study and linked administrative datasets. He has held leadership roles across several National Science Challenges. In Te Niwha, Andrew supervises survey design, Māori-responsive statistical methods, and IDI linkage, ensuring cultural safety and methodological excellence.

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Ngāpuhi, Pākehā, Tararā
QUALIFICATIONS
PhD, MSc, BA (Hons)
AFFILIATIONS
iNZight Analytics | University of Auckland

Lara is a Rutherford Discovery Fellow (2024–2029) and leading scholar in Māori politics, identity, and participation. She has led major projects on Māori roll choice, electoral systems, and intersectionality, and co-edited Government and Politics in Aotearoa New Zealand. Her international collaborations include Horizon Europe (EU-CIEMBLY). Lara’s expertise in survey methodology, political behaviour, and intersectional analysis is central to the Te Niwha panel’s design and policy relevance.

ORCiD
QUALIFICATIONS
PhD, MSc, BA (Hons)
AFFILIATIONS
Director, COMPASS Research Centre, University of Auckland

Barry is a social scientist and Director of the Centre of Methods and Policy Application in the Social Sciences (COMPASS), with extensive experience leading large-scale surveys and longitudinal studies. He has directed the NZ Election Study and International Social Survey Programme, and co-designed iwi-led surveys with the James Henare Māori Research Centre. Barry brings international standing in survey methodology and data collection and will oversee Te Niwha’s probabilistic survey implementation and quality assurance.

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Ngāti Whakaue
QUALIFICATIONS
PhD, MSc, BSc (Hons)
AFFILIATIONS
iNZight Analytics | University of Auckland

Tom is the lead developer of iNZight, a free, R-powered tool for data analysis and visualisation, with expertise in Bayesian and computational statistics. His work bridges statistical computing and accessible tools for non-specialists. In Te Niwha, Tom leads on data infrastructure and innovative statistical modelling, advancing real-time analysis and visualisation.

ORCiD
Ngāti Pāoa, Ngāti Tamatera, Ngāti Hako, Ngāti Tara, Tokonui, Tāwhaki, Te Māhurehure
QUALIFICATIONS
AFFILIATIONS
Foundation for Equity & Research New Zealand (FERNZ)
Deputy Chair, Te Ao Mārama Aotearoa Trust (TAMA)

Taki is the Deputy Chair of Te Ao Mārama Aotearoa Trust (TAMA), the national Māori disability trust established to ensure tāngata whaikaha Māori have a strong, independent voice. He provides governance leadership across kaupapa Māori health, disability, and social equity, and has been central to TAMA’s role in shaping the establishment of Whaikaha – Ministry of Disabled People. Through his governance roles, Taki advocates for Māori data sovereignty, equity in health and disability systems, and whānau-centred approaches to policy. His contribution to Te Niwha strengthens the project’s connection to tāngata whaikaha Māori communities and ensures that governance, tikanga, and accountability remain grounded in Māori worldviews.

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