Research Catalog

Are we there yet? : the future of the Treaty of Waitangi / Gareth Morgan & Susan Guthrie.

Title
Are we there yet? : the future of the Treaty of Waitangi / Gareth Morgan & Susan Guthrie.
Author
Morgan, G. H. T. (Gareth H. T.)
Publication
  • [Lower Hutt, New Zealand] : The Public Interest Publishing Company Ltd (PiP), [2014]
  • ©2014

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TextRequest in advance DU423.S6 M67 2014Off-site

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Additional Authors
Guthrie, Susan
Description
408 pages : illustrations; 23 cm
Summary
  • "Three questions: 'Where have we got to with the Treaty of Waitangi?'; 'Is where we have got to a good place?' and 'Where do we go from here?' Simple questions we thought. But nothing is simple when you start asking questions about the Treaty of Waitangi. Two years later we have emerged battered and bruised but with something we want to say. 'Fellas, we might be about to crash the truck and you're not even looking!' Maori leaders aspire to more political power for Maori, more Maori community autonomy and more economic assistance for Maori. It has become accepted practice among Maori, lawyers and politicians to use the Treaty to progress these aspirations. But there is a limit to the issues the Treaty can credibly be used to resolve. We think the strategy of couching these contemporary Maori aspirations as promises implied in the Treaty is flawed. It is not going to lead to agreement. It also risks undermining the status of the Treaty among non-Maori.^
  • Contemporary Maori aspirations are very important and must be debated, but they must be debated openly and honestly, each on their own merits, without looking to the Treaty for legitimacy. We think embedding unique political rights for Maori at the centre of public life is highly risky, and for that reason to be avoided. But we also think there's a lot that can be done to improve the lives of Maori. Rethinking the role of central government is essential. The role of government in a diverse society is to help people live lives they value, not some 'one size fits all' typecast. Shifting authority from central government to communities can help with this. But devolution will only improve people's lives if there is widespread collaboration across diverse communities within our society. What we've ended up with, and what we present here, is a personal assessment of the way New Zealand is governed.^
  • We focus, in particular, on recent changes to political rights and community authority that have been introduced in response to pressure to honour the Treaty. It's really about New Zealand's constitution but don't be put off by that word. This stuff matters and we could be doing a whole lot better than we are."--Publisher's description.
Subject
  • Treaty of Waitangi (1840 February 6)
  • 2000 - 2099
  • Māori (New Zealand people) > Social conditions
  • Tiriti o Waitangi
  • Kōrero nehe
  • Kāwanatanga
  • Tino rangatiratanga
  • Tōrangapū
  • Noho-ā-iwi
  • Āhuatanga pāpori
  • Maori (New Zealand people) > Social conditions
  • Race relations
  • Social history
  • New Zealand > Race relations
  • New Zealand > Social conditions > 21st century
  • New Zealand
Genre/Form
  • Treaties
  • Traités.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Introduction -- 1. Progress -- 2. Ethnicity -- 3. Evidence about the importance of ethnicity -- 4. New Zealand's ethnic groups -- 5. Governing society -- 6. Governing arrangements in New Zealand -- 7. The Treaty of Waitangi (Appendix: The Waitangi Tribunal, Parliament, and the Office of Treaty Settlements) -- 8. The development of princiople -- 9. The consultation principle (Appendix: Unique Māori rights with respect to natural resources and cultural treasures) -- 10. Socio-economic disadvantage -- 11. Family and community life, and education -- 12. Reflections and new directions.
ISBN
  • 9780987666680
  • 0987666681
LCCN
^^2014495414
OCLC
  • 898970455
  • SCSB-12515157
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library