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Search results for engaging with Maori.
1445 item(s) matching your search terms
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...to themselves.
Ngāti Rangiteaorere held all their lands under customary tenure when the native laws of the 1860s came into force. However the Native Land Court was not designed to accommodate the complex and fluid customary land usages of Māori as it assigned permanent ownership to a clearly defined area of land. The title determination process also carried significant costs for Ngāti Rangiteaorere.
In 1882 the Native Land Court investigated the ownership of the Whakapoungakau bloc...
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...management processes in relation to the Range.
Te Reo revitalisation
The Deed provides for the Crown to support the Iwi of Hauraki in their development and implementation of a strategy for Te Reo revitalisation. This includes meetings between the Minister for Māori Development, the Minister of Education and the Collective Cultural Entity to discuss the development of the strategy and its implementation, and a payment of $3 million after the Deed has been signed.
Fisheries
The Minister responsi...
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...Ngāti Mākino
Ngāti Mākino did not sign the Treaty of Waitangi, and during the 1840s and 1850s dwelt peacefully with settlers in their rohe. From 1863 the Crown gradually increased its presence in the Bay of Plenty but applied little pressure on Māori to sell their lands. Customary law largely continued to prevail.
In 1863 the war between the Crown and the Kingitanga in the Waikato brought tension to the region. The need to choose between support for the Crown, degrees of armed neutra...
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