College of Humanities and Social Sciences staff
Contact details +6449793624
Dr Elle Brittain DPsych, MA
Lecturer in Psychology
School of PsychologyDr Eleanor (Elle) Brittain is Ngāti Kahungunu ki Te Wairoa and Ngāti Rakaipaaka. She is a Lecturer in Te Kura Hinengaro Tangata, School of Psychology, based on the Pukeahu, Wellington campus. She is also a Clinical Psychologist.
Her research focuses on issues pertinent to Māori, including research projects that have explored Māori psychology and wellbeing. With experience in implementing methodologies grounded in the values of Kaupapa Māori research theory, her research practice is predominantly qualitative. Ultimately she sees her work as in service of communities in order to facilitate change, especially for Māori and groups who have greater need.
Professional
Contact details
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Location: 7C 54, Block 7
Campus: Pukeahu - Wellington
Qualifications
- Doctor of Clinical Psychology - Massey University (2023)
- Master of Arts with Distinction in Psychology - Massey University (2016)
- Postgraduate Diploma in Arts with Merit in Psychology - Massey University (2016)
Research Expertise
Research Interests
Elle is interested in Māori experiences as related broadly to psychology, including Māori wellbeing, wairua, spirituality, culturally safe and relevant psychological interventions, equity in mental health, as well as racism and anti-racism. In her work she seeks to enhance understandings of sites of crisis as well as sites of resistance and strength for Māori, with the broader aims to initiate action and contribute meaningfully to communities. As a colleague of the Centre for Indigenous Psychologies, she appreciates Indigenous psychologies and is open to research in these areas. From a methodological perspective, she is enthusiastic about qualitative approaches that focus on meaning-making, namely narrative inquiry, narrative psychology, and discourse analysis.
Thematics
Health and Well-being
Area of Expertise
Field of research codes
Health, Clinical and Counselling Psychology (170106):
Kaupapa Maori Psychology (170108):
Psychology (170100):
Psychology And Cognitive Sciences (170000)
Keywords
Māori; wellbeing; wairua; spirituality; Indigenous psychologies; racism.
Research Outputs
Journal
[Journal article]Authored by: Brittain, E., Maydell, E.
[Journal article]Authored by: Brittain, E., Maydell, E.
[Journal article]Authored by: Brittain, E.
Consultancy and Languages
Languages
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Te Reo Māori
Last used: Today
Spoken ability: Average
Written ability: Average
Teaching and Supervision
Teaching Statement
Elle teaches undergraduate courses in Indigenous psychologies and clinical psychology. She also has input to the postgraduate clinical psychology training programme on the Pukeahu, Wellington campus.
Graduate Supervision Statement
Elle values collaboration and approaches research supervision with a focus on relationships. Integral to her background is a passion for engaging with and working alongside people. As an early-career scholar, she views supervision as an opportunity for mutual learning and development.
She is open to supervising projects that align with her research interests and expertise in topics related to Māori wellbeing, wairua, spirituality, Indigenous psychologies, culturally safe and relevant psychological interventions, equity in mental health, as well as racism and anti-racism. She is well-suited to projects that use qualitative approaches and has a particular interest in Kaupapa Māori and narrative methodologies.
Summary of Doctoral Supervision
Position | Current | Completed |
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Co-supervisor | 2 | 0 |
Current Doctoral Supervision
Co-supervisor of:
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Aorangi Kora
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Doctor of Philosophy
Te mana o te wahine - Exploring Māori women's experiences of leadership and online misogyny. -
Erani Motu
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Doctor of Clinical Psychology
Wairuatanga: Exploring the understanding and implementation of wairua-informed practice with rangatahi Māori in a youth forensic setting.
Media and Links
Other Links
- Centre for Indigenous Psychologies - The Centre for Indigenous Psychologies is a space where Māori and Indigenous psychologies are embraced, experienced, understood, and developed. In 2024 Dr Elle Brittain is Acting Co-Director.
- Spiritual Care in Healthcare Research - Dr Elle Brittain is part of an inter-disciplinary, multi-university research project that will seek to identify and nurture wairuatanga and spirituality in Aotearoa, New Zealand’s health system.
- Dr Elle Brittain awarded HRC Emerging Researcher First Grant
- Māori worldview needed for psychological healing and recovery
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Last updated on Monday 27 February 2023