Dr Jacquelyn Elkington specialises in Kaupapa Maori Supervision, Human Growth Development and the Implications of Culture in Social Science. The methodology of Kaupapa Maori Research is strongly promoted to challenge general-stream space and support indigenous critical mass. Main influences include writings from Pohatu, Smith &, Smith, Ruwhiu, Jenkins, Mead, Meyer, Royal, Ritchie as well as Freire, and Burr. Jacquelyn's own writings include: My Journey of Social Constructionism, (Masters Unpublished, 2001), Purakau: States of Human Development (2010), Whanau Tauoko (PhD Unpublished, 2013), A Kaupapa Maori supervision context - cultural and professional (2013). Elkington is Nelson-born, Ng...