# The HOMING method: a participatory interview tool integrating Indigenous perspectives in housing research

**Authors:** James Berghan, Fiona Cram, Anna Adcock, Sarah Tawhai

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/frma.2025.1620770 · 2025-07-31

## TL;DR

The HOMING method is a participatory tool that centers Indigenous perspectives in housing research by allowing participants to define what makes a house a home.

## Contribution

HOMING introduces a novel, culturally responsive method for housing research grounded in Kaupapa Māori principles.

## Key findings

- HOMING shifts power to participants by using self-determined measures of housing quality.
- The method aligns with decolonial research approaches by centering Indigenous perspectives.
- Case studies demonstrate HOMING's potential to expand inclusive and reflexive housing research methodologies.

## Abstract

Conventional housing assessment tools often impose externally defined criteria, measuring housing quality against predetermined standards that may overlook the lived experiences and cultural values of residents. In contrast, the HOMING method is a participatory tool that centers self-determined measures of home and housing quality. Rooted in Kaupapa Māori research principles, HOMING shifts power to participants, allowing them to articulate and assess what makes a house a home based on their own lived experiences, rather than externally imposed benchmarks. The name HOMING encapsulates both “Home Of Mine”—emphasizing the deeply personal nature of home—and “housing” as an active process: what people feel, think, and do to create a home. Participants use blank wooden blocks [named Aro Rākau by a kuia (female elder)] to write or draw their own housing values, then collaboratively rank and discuss these through a hands-on process of building and assessing home characteristics. This method not only facilitates rich, nuanced understandings of home, but also aligns with decolonial research approaches by centering Indigenous and participant-led perspectives. This paper introduces the HOMING method, outlines its rationale within a Kaupapa Māori research paradigm, and presents case studies reflecting on its application. Through a collaborative reflective process, the paper explores how HOMING can expand housing research methodologies, making them more inclusive, reflexive, and culturally responsive.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350276/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350276