Lo‘i Pacific Research and Innovation Hub

Growing Pacific research, researchers and research excellence

E mālama i ka wai.

Take care of the water — Kanaka 'Ōiwi or native Hawaiian proverb

The taro plant is a food staple for indigenous peoples across Moananuiākea. It is also closely linked to cultural concepts of land, family, genealogy and well-being.

Taro is best grown under certain conditions, often including well-irrigated lowland wetlands any taro varieties thrive in plentiful, cool, running water and deep, moist soils. Thriving taro patches rely on the community coming together and often getting up to their knees in the water and the work together.

The Lo'i Pacific Research and Innovation Hub is a place where diverse stakeholders can come together in a spirit of indigenous innovation to achieve meaningful impact and to deliver outcomes that matter to Pacific communities, organisations and various stakeholders. 

Like a Pacific wetland taro patch, the Hub is a place for growing a thriving ecosystem of Pacific research, researchers and research excellence.

The Hub's goal is to: create a thriving and innovative Pacific research ecosystem; engage in "push research" which connects with "pull" innovation through academic rigor, social impact and transformative outcomes; build collaborative research communities of diverse stakeholders with heterogenous knowledge; increase trust in research and research methods amongst Pacific communities; utilise data analytics and other tools without forgetting existing literature and Pacific voice in order to be holistically evidence-based; and produce knowledge and solutions which actually benefit Pacific end-users.

The Hub sits under the Assistant-Vice Chancellor Pacific and is closely aligned with the ongoing strategic commitments of the University of Waikato to increase and grow Pacific research, researchers and research excellence.

The Hub's design also reflects rich learnings about pathways of Pacific learner success following two major UoW projects — the Ōritetanga Learner Success Project with the Tertiary Education Commission and the data-informed initiatives to enhance Māori and Pacific Student Achievement project with Ako Aotearoa.

Like these projects, the Hub is aimed at bringing diverse voices data, research and solutions together in order to create better outcomes.

Pacific research at Waikato

Ma ka hane ka ike

In the work is the knowledge — native Hawaiian 'ōlelo no'eau or proverb

Across Moananuiākea or the Pacific Ocean, anciently and in many places today, communities have lived ecosystems where resources are managed so that benefits are shared, dynamic responses and innovation result from disruption and uncertainty, and the goal is abundance for all. 

For communities to thrive, water must flow right through the ecosystems from ma'uka to makai — or from the mountains to shore and reef. It must flow from the tall trees of the forests to the taro patches where everyone works together to the sea of possibilities beyond.

At the University of Waikato, we have a thriving research ecosystem that nurtures Pacific research, researchers and research excellence.

Pacific research degrees

We are committed to growing Pacific researchers and graduate students at Waikato study with researchers who are experts and leaders in their fields.

Join a vibrant community of researchers studying what matters to Pacific people and communities at a research-intensive university by undertaking a research degree. 

Explore your options at the School of Graduate Research.

Kava ceremony photo by Todd M Henry

Kava based therapy for psychological trauma

Pacific health researcher Dr Apo Aporosa has been awarded a Health Research Council grant to co-lead a team evaluating the efficacy of traditionally influenced kava use spaces as a therapeutic environment for reducing PTSD symptoms.