Due to limited access to the building, the Auckland Information Office is available by appointment only. Please contact us by email mlctamakimakaurau@justice.govt.nz or phone 09 279 5850 to make an appointment
He pānuitanga tēnei kia mōhiotia ai ka tū Te Kooti Whenua
Māori ki te whakawā, ki te uiui hoki, i ngā tikanga o ngā tono
a muri ake - Nau mai, haere mai
A Special Sitting
At Rotorua
Māori Land Court, 1143 Haupapa Street, Rotorua
Thursday 5 December 2024
Judge T M Wara Presiding
Join Via Zoom
Meeting ID: 851 0825 3828 | Passcode: 024235
PĀNUI
NO.
She also acted as legal counsel for Treaty claimants and Māori land clients. She holds a LLM from Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington, and in 2023 received her PhD at Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi for her thesis "Ko te mana te utu: Narratives of sovereignty, law, and tribal citizenship in the Pōtikirua ki te Toka-a-Taiau District".
Contents:
Applications for hearing in JANUARY | KOHI-TÄTEA 2024:
2 - 13 Te Rohe o Aotea
14 - 15 Te Rohe o Tairäwhiti
16 - 25 Te Rohe o Taitokerau
26 Te Rohe o Täkitimu
27 - 28 Te Rohe o Te Waipounamu
29 - 35 Te Rohe o Waiariki
36 - 42 Te Rohe o Waikato-Maniapoto
43 Office of the Chief Registrar
44 - 61 Applications that remain outstanding in the Office of the Chief Registrar
62 - 65 Court Sittings that have been rescheduled
66
The working list of potential owners was updated at a sitting of the Māori Land Court in Te
Waipounamu on 26 April 2022, minute book 76 Te Waipounamu 246-311.
It is also possible to view iwi areas of interest as identified through Te Tiriti settlements. The information has been gathered from several publicly accessible map sources and placed on one single map.
Ō mātou tari ā-rohe
Our district offices
Contact your nearest district office.
Te tuku uiui
Submit an enquiry online
Send us an enquiry online in Pātaka Whenua.
Ō mātou tari ā-rohe
Our district offices
Contact your nearest district office.
Te tuku uiui
Submit an enquiry online
Send us an enquiry online in Pātaka Whenua.
Only 17% of Māori knew how to speak te reo, only 5% of our children in schools could speak te reo, and furthermore, there were people of that time who declared there was no benefit in teaching te reo and no benefit in the continued survival of te reo Māori.