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Issue 4:
Are iwi in the post-settlement environment on an equal footing after their Treaty settlements, in terms of the types of redress that were on the table and the adherence to relativities at the time of their negotiations? Are settlements ‘fair and durable’?

Reports from Waitangi Tribunal
Giselle Byrnes
The paradox of ‘settlement’: History and the modern Treaty claims process
Treaty of Waitangi
Ewan Morris
The ‘full and final’ fantasy: why Treaty settlements do not mean that we can move on from history
Statue of Mahatma Gandhi outside Wellington Railway Station
Rachel Buchanan
Telling the truth in our streets: storytelling and Treaty settlements
Ngāti Awa deed of settlement signing
Jeremy Gardiner
Achieving enduring settlements
Pine Forest
Toko Kapea
Now that we have settled, what is in it for me?

Opinion Pieces Elsewhere

Jim Anderton ‘Full and final’ Waitangi settlements?
Martin Williams A fiscal cap on a full and final settlement of all Maori claims is illegal and inappropriate
Tim Selwyn Full and final
Tim Selwyn Wai now: ratchet and quanta

  • Issue 1: What will be the importance of the Treaty in 50 years' time?
  • Issue 2: Will the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples have any impact?
  • Issue 3: What should be the future of the Māori seats?
  • Issue 4: Are Treaty settlements 'full and final'?
  • Issue 5: How will the Crown-Māori co-management of natural resources work out?

Recent Comments

  • leanne cotter: Trustees need to be completely transparent in how they invest and apportion capital. At the moment it seems there is very little trickle down effect... Feb 23, 9:02 PM
  • Jarrod: Kia ora, The Urewera District Native Reserve Act 1896 was introduced during a period of Mâori survival. Would Co-management surivive too? Perhaps John Key should... Nov 17, 7:30 PM
  • Wendy McGuiness: Thank you for your insightful question. As you may have found in your studies and as I note in this paper, New Zealand’s constitution is... Oct 07, 3:48 PM
  • Mary Ropiha: Hi I'm just inquiring. I am a first year tertiary student for Te Wananga O Raukawa O Pukekohe MBS. And I am currently studying the... Sep 24, 4:47 PM
  • Peter James: Linda begins her thoughtful piece with the comment that ‘environmental co-management works well: through empowering the community you get better environmental outcomes. The Ōrākei and... Sep 13, 10:49 AM

Background Paper

A changing population, changing identities: The Crown-Māori relationship in 50 years' time? [600 KB PDF]

Who is 'Māori', and who or what is 'the Crown'?

Who we are, and how we understand ourselves and name our identities, is always changing. As we project what New Zealand's population might look like in 50 years’ time, we need to consider not only technical influences on population composition, such as fertility and mortality rates and migration, but also changes in how we might view ourselves.

Project partners: The School of Maori Studies and the Institute of Policy Studies The School of Maori Studies Institute of Policy Studies

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