Miami University - Summer 2023
Marketing 175, Chapter 1 Paper
Professor Colella, Section 5
May 21, 2023
Furthermore, Ella Yvette Henry (born 1954) is a New Zealand Māori academic, affiliated
with Ngātikahu ki Whangaroa, Ngāti Kuri, and Te Rārawa iwi. In June 2022 she was
appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) for services to Māori,
education and media.
Class Date: 21/2/2024
Instructor’s Note: Use more active voice in your writing.
PAPER CONTENT:
## Conclusion (List)
- As of 2022 she is a full professor in the business school at Auckland University of
Technology, specialising in Māori media.
- == Academic career ==
Henry was born in 1954 in Kaitaia.
- She is from a poor family, and was the first in her whānau (extended family) to attend
university, and went despite less-than-positive experiences at high school.
- She was expelled from school at the age of 15, but when she got to university she found out
"[she] wasn't as stupid as [she] thought [she] was".
## Findings
Henry has a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Philosophy from the University of Auckland.
Her MPhil thesis was titled Rangatira wahine: Maori women managers & leadership, and
was completed in 1994. In 2012 she completed a PhD titled Te Wairua Auaha: emancipatory
Māori entrepreneurship in screen production at Auckland University of Technology,
supervised by Pare Keiha and Charles Crothers. In 1990 she was president of the Auckland
University Students' Association. An active member of the NewLabour Party, she was the
party's education spokesperson and stood in the seat of Roskill at the 1990 general election.
## Analysis (List)
- From 2002 to 2004, Henry was Head of Puukenga School of Māori Education at Unitec
Institute of Technology, before moving to the Auckland University of Technology, where she
is Director of Māori Advancement.
- She was promoted to full professor in 2022.
- Henry has a background in the screen industry, having been a writer, actor, commentator
and presenter.
## Discussion (List)
- Between 2004 and 2007 she was the host of the Whakaata Māori show called Ask your
Aunties, and played the occasional character of Auntie Kuini on Shortland Street.
- She helped to establish Nga Aho Whakaari (the Association of Māori in Screen Production),
and was then appointed as chair.
## Background
She has also chaired the Association of Women in Film and Television New Zealand. She was
executive director for Greenpeace in 1994 and in 2001 was a Human Rights Commissioner,
before resigning after being criticised by Police for using her position to make allegations of
racism against a police officer in relation to a traffic matter involving her partner.
## Conclusion (List)
- Henry has been a Treaty negotiator for Ngātikahu ki Whangaroa iwi and chaired the Post-
Settlement Governance Entity until 2019.
- Henry says:“I’ve been in the tertiary education sector for 36 years.
- I have had the opportunity to complete a number of degrees and study my people and
culture.
- I didn’t know that we had such an extraordinary history until I went to university.
## Findings (List)
- When you learn stuff like that it really does change the way you look at who you are, what
you are and where you fit in the world.”
== Honours and awards ==
Henry was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2022 Queen's
Birthday and Platinum Jubilee Honours, for services to Māori, education and media.
- == Selected works ==
Ella Henry; Hone Pene (May 2001).
- "Kaupapa Maori: Locating Indigenous Ontology, Epistemology and Methodology in the
Academy".
## Analysis (List)
- Organization.
- 8 (2): 234–242.
- doi:10.1177/1350508401082009.
- ISSN 1350-5084.
- Wikidata Q115567722.
## Discussion (List)
- Howard H Frederick; Ella Henry.
- "Innovation and entrepreneurship amongst Pakeha and Maori in New Zealand".
## Background
International Research in the Business Disciplines: 115–140. doi:10.1016/S1074-
7877(03)04006-6. ISSN 1074-7877. Wikidata Q115567720.
## Conclusion
Chellie Spiller; Rachel Maunganui Wolfgramm; Ella Henry; Robert Pouwhare (12 December
2019). "Paradigm warriors: Advancing a radical ecosystems view of collective leadership
from an Indigenous Māori perspective". Human Relations.
## Findings (List)
- 73 (4): 516–543.
- doi:10.1177/0018726719893753.
- ISSN 0018-7267.
- Wikidata Q115567716.
- Ella Henry; Jamie Newth; Chellie Spiller (November 2017).
## Analysis
"Emancipatory Indigenous social innovation: Shifting power through culture and
technology". Journal of Management and Organization. 23 (6): 786–802.
## Discussion
doi:10.1017/JMO.2017.64. ISSN 1833-3672. Wikidata Q115567719. Ella Y. Henry; Leo-Paul
Dana; Patrick J. Murphy (13 October 2017).
## Background
"Telling their own stories: Māori entrepreneurship in the mainstream screen industry".
Entrepreneurship and Regional Development.
## Conclusion
30 (1–2): 118–145. doi:10.1080/08985626.2017.1388445. ISSN 0898-5626. Wikidata
Q115567718.
## Findings
Ella Henry; Rachel Wolfgramm (9 December 2015). "Relational leadership – An indigenous
Māori perspective".
## Analysis (List)
- Leadership: 174271501561628. doi:10.1177/1742715015616282.
- ISSN 1742-7150.
- Wikidata Q115567717.
## Discussion
Pouarii Tanner (2018), New Pacific Standard: Using Tivaevae to Inform a New Strategic
Business Model for Pacific Art and Design, Tuwhera Open Access Publisher,
hdl:10292/11650, Wikidata Q112938402
== References ==
== External links ==
Indigenous 100 episode on Ella Henry
References / Works Cited:
1. Wikipedia (n.d.). Retrieved from [Link]
2. Random Book Title (2022). Academic Publishing House.