Tongan Pusiaki Adoption Study | UoA Research Illuminates Traditional Kinship System

Reclaiming Tongan Relational Kinship Through Indigenous Scholarship

  • university-of-auckland
  • research-publication-news
  • pacific-studies
  • tongan-pusiaki
  • adoption-research

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

a city street with cars parked on the side of it
Photo by Andrew Yu on Unsplash

Promote Your Research… Share it Worldwide

Have a story or a research paper to share? Become a contributor and publish your work on AcademicJobs.com.

Submit your Research - Make it Global News

Discovering Pusiaki: A Relational Kinship Practice Redefined

Pacific Studies at the University of Auckland is at the forefront of illuminating Indigenous practices through groundbreaking research. Doctoral candidate Amanda Sullivan-Lee's work, titled Reclaiming Connection: Indigenous Tongan Adoption (Pusiaki) in Historical Perspective, challenges conventional understandings of adoption. This study reveals pusiaki—full name Pusiaki, an Indigenous Tongan adoption practice—as far more than a simple child transfer. Instead, it functions as a dynamic, multilayered kinship system that fosters enduring connections across families, lineages, and communities. 70 0

In Tongan culture, where family and communal ties form the bedrock of society, pusiaki exemplifies relational care. Originating before missionary influences in the 19th century, it allows children to move fluidly between birth and adoptive households while maintaining strong bonds to their heritage, land (fonua), and extended kin. This fluidity contrasts sharply with Western closed adoption models, highlighting a culturally embedded approach to child-rearing that prioritizes collective well-being over individual ownership.

Amanda Sullivan-Lee: Bridging Personal Experience and Academic Rigor

Amanda Sullivan-Lee, a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Arts at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, brings a unique perspective to her research. Raised as an adopted Pacific person outside the Pacific in San Francisco, she returned to explore her roots through Indigenous frameworks. Her journey intertwines intellectual pursuit with personal healing, making her study profoundly resonant. 70

"Talking about adoption is intellectually challenging—and it’s also emotionally challenging," Sullivan-Lee shares. "As an adopted Pacific person raised outside the Pacific, returning to Indigenous frameworks has been both rigorous and healing." Her work not only advances Pacific Studies but also inspires adoptees and scholars alike, demonstrating how lived experience enriches academic inquiry at New Zealand's leading university.

The Essence of Traditional Tongan Kinship Systems

Tongan kinship, or fāmili, extends beyond nuclear units to encompass vast networks governed by reciprocity, respect, and hierarchy. Terms like kainga (extended family) and vā (sacred relational space) underscore the cultural emphasis on interconnectedness. Pusiaki fits seamlessly into this tapestry, serving as a mechanism for distributing care, resources, and responsibilities across households. 51

  • Collective Child-Rearing: Children are raised communally, strengthening social bonds.
  • Lineage Preservation: Adoption reinforces rather than severs ancestral ties.
  • Gender Roles: Women often play pivotal roles in facilitating pusiaki arrangements.

In New Zealand, home to over 82,000 Tongans—the largest Pacific ethnic group—this system supports diaspora communities navigating modern challenges like urbanization and migration.

Historical Evolution of Pusiaki Pre- and Post-Colonialism

Historical records, including fragile manuscripts in Auckland's Special Collections like Elizabeth Bott Spillius's field notes, reveal pusiaki's pre-colonial vitality. It involved strategic child placements for alliances, education, or labor support, always with ongoing parental involvement. Missionaries and colonial laws in the 19th-20th centuries imposed Western nuclear family ideals, leading to 'closed stranger adoptions' that ruptured whakapapa (genealogy). 70

By the mid-20th century, Tongan migration to New Zealand amplified these tensions. Today, pusiaki persists informally, adapting to legal frameworks while retaining cultural essence. Sullivan-Lee's archival talanoa (conversations) uncovers how Tongans resisted erasure, preserving practices through oral histories passed in fales (homes).

Read the full University of Auckland feature

Innovative Methodology: Pacific Storywork Meets Archival Analysis

Sullivan-Lee employs a decolonized approach inspired by scholars like Linda Tuhiwai Smith and Tui Atua Tupua Tamasese Ta‘isi Efi. Key methods include:

  • Talanoa: Informal dialogues with Tongan knowledge holders for lived insights.
  • Oral Histories: Capturing narratives from elders and adoptees.
  • Archival Research: Analyzing missionary records and ethnographies for 'archival silences.'
  • Indigenous Storywork: Weaving multiple knowledge forms to center Pacific voices.

Presented at the Pacific History Association Conference in Sāmoa, this methodology ensures research is 'with us, not about us,' fostering community ownership. 70

Talanoa session in Tongan community for pusiaki research

Core Findings: Pusiaki as Sustained Relational Care

The study redefines pusiaki as a living practice of resilience. Findings highlight:

  • Children navigate multiple homes, embodying 'openness and movement.'
  • Ties to birth families remain active, preventing identity loss.
  • Community enforces reciprocity, embedding children in fonua (land/people).

"Pusiaki endures because it’s relational, flexible and held by community—that persistence itself is Indigenous resilience and resistance," notes Sullivan-Lee. This contrasts with colonial models, offering a blueprint for restorative family practices. 70

Colonial Impacts and Pathways to Healing

20th-century policies mirrored those affecting Māori whānau, enforcing permanent severances. Sullivan-Lee draws parallels with Dr. Erica Newman's research on Māori 'closed stranger adoption.' In NZ, Tongan families faced similar traumas, yet pusiaki's adaptability allowed underground persistence.

Healing involves reclaiming narratives: Adoptees find solace knowing their stories align with ancestral practices; adoptive parents are urged to honor biological kin ties. Community talanoa sessions post-presentation sparked shared stories, underscoring collective recovery.

Explore Pacific research careers

Pusiaki's Relevance to New Zealand's Tongan Diaspora

Auckland hosts the world's largest Tongan population outside Tonga. Amid pressures like housing costs and cultural dilution, pusiaki bolsters identity. Sullivan-Lee's bFM radio appearance amplified discussions, with listeners recounting multi-household upbringings. 70

For NZ higher education, this research enriches Pacific Studies curricula, informing policies on family support and cultural competency in social services. It positions UoA as a hub for Indigenous scholarship, benefiting Tongan students and professionals.

Implications for Adoptees, Families, and Policymakers

Practical insights include:

  • For Adoptees: "You are not alone; reconnection is collective."
  • For Families: Facilitate questions without burdening children.
  • Policy: Integrate relational models into NZ adoption laws for Pacific families.

This could reduce transgenerational trauma, enhancing mental health outcomes in Pasifika communities.

Tongan extended family illustrating pusiaki kinship ties University jobs in Auckland

Placing Pusiaki in Broader Pacific Kinship Traditions

Pusiaki mirrors practices like Samoan toga (adoption) and Māori whāngai, emphasizing vā and reciprocity. Sullivan-Lee's conference collaborations with peers like Allyssa Verna-Pula highlight shared resilience against colonization. In NZ, these systems counter nuclear family individualism, promoting holistic child development.

Future Outlook: Advancing Pacific Scholarship at UoA

As Sullivan-Lee nears thesis completion, her work promises publications and community workshops. UoA's commitment to Pacific research, via centers like the Pacific Studies program, positions NZ as a leader in Indigenous knowledge revival. Potential extensions include comparative studies with other Polynesian nations.

Explore opportunities in higher ed jobs or rate your professors to engage with this vibrant field.

Why This Matters for Higher Education and Communities

Sullivan-Lee's research exemplifies how university scholarship bridges academia and lived realities, fostering healing and policy change. For NZ's Tongan community, it reaffirms cultural strengths amid diaspora challenges. Aspiring researchers can draw inspiration from her blend of rigor and heart, advancing higher ed career advice.

Discover more Pacific insights and connect with university jobs or higher ed positions.

Portrait of Dr. Elena Ramirez

Dr. Elena RamirezView full profile

Contributing Writer

Advancing higher education excellence through expert policy reforms and equity initiatives.

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Frequently Asked Questions

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦What is pusiaki in Tongan culture?

Pusiaki is an Indigenous Tongan adoption practice, a relational kinship system predating colonial influences. Unlike Western models, it maintains ongoing ties between birth and adoptive families.

🎓Who conducted the Tongan pusiaki adoption study?

Amanda Sullivan-Lee, PhD candidate in Pacific Studies at the University of Auckland, led the research titled Reclaiming Connection.

🔗How does pusiaki differ from Western adoption?

Pusiaki emphasizes fluidity and connection, allowing children to move between households while linked to lineage and land, contrasting closed legal transfers.

📖What methodology was used in the study?

Pacific storywork, talanoa, oral histories, and archival analysis, centering Tongan voices and addressing colonial silences.

🏛️What are the historical roots of pusiaki?

Pre-missionary Tongan society used pusiaki for alliances and care distribution, preserved through oral traditions despite colonial disruptions.

⚖️How has colonialism impacted Tongan kinship?

Introduced closed adoptions severing ties, similar to Māori whāngai ruptures, causing intergenerational trauma in NZ Pasifika communities.

Pacific research careers

🇳🇿What is the relevance to NZ Tongan communities?

With 82,000+ Tongans in NZ, pusiaki supports diaspora identity amid modern pressures like migration and urbanization.

❤️What implications does the study have for adoptees?

Affirms they are part of a storied Pacific history; encourages reconnection without isolation.

🌺How does pusiaki fit broader Pacific practices?

Aligns with Samoan toga and Māori whāngai, emphasizing vā (relational space) and reciprocity across Polynesia.

🚀What future directions arise from this research?

Thesis completion, publications, workshops; potential policy reforms for relational adoptions in NZ.Join Pacific Studies

📚Where can I learn more about UoA Pacific Studies?

Visit University of Auckland's Faculty of Arts for programs and opportunities in Tongan and Pacific research.