Showing 51 - 60 of 119 publications.
Māori Wardens Newsletter - September 2007
Aroha ki te Tangata is a bi-monthly newsletter which highlights the successes of the Māori Warden Project, and profiles the good work of Māori Wardens around the motu.
Proposed Māori Land Service Brochure
This leaflet sets out the proposed functions of the new proposed Māori Land Service based primarily on what Te Ture Whenua Māori Bill (the Bill) says.
Māori Wardens Newsletter - October 2010
Aroha ki te Tangata is a bi-monthly newsletter which highlights the successes of the Māori Warden Project, and profiles the good work of Māori Wardens around the motu.
Building Relationships for Effective Engagement with Māori
Explains how and why to engage with Māori as part of a policy process. 2 pages.
Māori Wardens Annual Report 2019/2020
Inaugural annual report of key events and activities by Māori Wardens within last financial year.
Owners' Aspirations Regarding the Utilisation of Māori Land
Te Puni Kōkiri commissioned case study research to improve its knowledge base about land utilisation and identify areas of improvement in current regulatory regimes so as to promote Māori land utilisation. The report, “Owners’ Aspirations Regarding the Utilisation of Māori Land”, sought to identify the aspirations that Māori have for their land and how these can best be supported.
Māori cultural revitalisation in social media
Dr Acushla Deanne (Dee) Sciascia is of Ngāti Ruanui, Ngāruahine Rangi, Te Atiawa descent. She was awarded the Fulbright Harkness New Zealand Fellowship where she disseminated her doctoral research findings throughout the USA. More recently, her research has extended into online Indigenous citizenship and the expression and actions of tino rangatiratanga (self-determination) by Indigenous communities through socially mediated spaces.
Te Ia o te Nohonga Ā-Māori
Home ownership is an important way for Māori to support whänau and build wealth. This fact sheet documents trends in Māori home ownership,comparing patterns across different regions, age groups and income bands.
Whenua Māori Programme: Targeted changes to Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993
This booklet summarises the proposed legislative changes to Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 when Te Ture Whenua Māori (Succession, Dispute Resolution, and Related Matters) Amendment Act was introduced to Parliament in September 2019. The amendments were passed in August 2020 and will come into force on 6 February 2021.
Tirohanga Ohanga mō Te Moana a Toi: Māori Entrepreneurs in Te Moana ā Toi and New Zealand for 2001 and 2006
Growing and promoting higher levels of Māori entrepreneurship and innovation has been identified as one of the key enablers for greater Māori participation in the future economy.