This article examines controversies around the representation of Maori in the process that aimed at settling colonial grievances about the dispossession of their land in the 19th century. The analysis of contemporary questions is situated in a historical perspective on the nature of property rights in the past: who used to own the land then and what does it mean now? A legal anthropological perspective is used to disentangle historical and contemporary concerns in order to refine the quest for the right balance between historical justice and social justice
In considering progressive movements within the Maori race during the 20th century, it has been usua...
A Show of Justice looks at New Zealand in the nineteenth century when British officials and humanita...
In 1840 the indigenous Maori tribes of New Zealand ceded the sovereignty of New Zealand to the Briti...
Item does not contain fulltextThis article examines controversies around the representation of Maori...
This thesis attempts to understand the intellectual milieu of Maori society in the early colonial p...
Many of the countries of the Pacific region (including Australia and New Zealand) have a British col...
Contains fulltext : 63749-OA.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In New Zealan...
In New Zealand there has been a remarkable shift in government policy towards Maori tribes since the...
In 1995, inter-ethnic relations between Maori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, and the New Zea...
This document describes the application of a property rights analysis to the land use history of col...
Debate about Treaty claims over conservation lands has recently become a feature of the discourse su...
This paper examines the judicial construction of jurisdiction over Maori in the 1840s in New Zealand...
Michael Brown famously asked ‘Who owns native culture?’ This paper revisits that question by analyzi...
Contains fulltext : 77418.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This article que...
The aim of this study is to investigate and identify the effects the Native Land Court and native la...
In considering progressive movements within the Maori race during the 20th century, it has been usua...
A Show of Justice looks at New Zealand in the nineteenth century when British officials and humanita...
In 1840 the indigenous Maori tribes of New Zealand ceded the sovereignty of New Zealand to the Briti...
Item does not contain fulltextThis article examines controversies around the representation of Maori...
This thesis attempts to understand the intellectual milieu of Maori society in the early colonial p...
Many of the countries of the Pacific region (including Australia and New Zealand) have a British col...
Contains fulltext : 63749-OA.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In New Zealan...
In New Zealand there has been a remarkable shift in government policy towards Maori tribes since the...
In 1995, inter-ethnic relations between Maori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, and the New Zea...
This document describes the application of a property rights analysis to the land use history of col...
Debate about Treaty claims over conservation lands has recently become a feature of the discourse su...
This paper examines the judicial construction of jurisdiction over Maori in the 1840s in New Zealand...
Michael Brown famously asked ‘Who owns native culture?’ This paper revisits that question by analyzi...
Contains fulltext : 77418.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This article que...
The aim of this study is to investigate and identify the effects the Native Land Court and native la...
In considering progressive movements within the Maori race during the 20th century, it has been usua...
A Show of Justice looks at New Zealand in the nineteenth century when British officials and humanita...
In 1840 the indigenous Maori tribes of New Zealand ceded the sovereignty of New Zealand to the Briti...