The Covid Response
04 Jun 2020 | NewsJudge Terena Wara discusses how the Māori Land Court responded to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Judge Terena Wara discusses how the Māori Land Court responded to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
A big part on how we do this is by involving the commitment of our people to provide great service to the public every day.
The project continued to receive support from the National Government to its completion.
This new list was intended to be a “stake in the ground” from which updates could be added.
This will prompt you to create a new password. mailto:te.tiratu@justice.govt.nz māorilandcourt.govt.nz Step 3 3.1 Enter your new Password, then click “Submit & Proceed” māorilandcourt.govt.nz 3.2 Check your email for the verification code, then enter the code and click “Verify” 3.3 Now you should be able to login:
Documents/Troubleshooting/Forgot-Password-Guide-v1.pdf (349 kb)
Te Puna Manawa Whenua was developed by an editing committee of judges from the Court.
Governance entities In the context in which I work, we have a range of governance entities, from trusts to incorporations, but no matter what the governance structure is - whether it is an ahu whenua trust, a whānau trust, a whenua tōpū trust, a pūtea trust, a kaitiaki trust, or an incorporation - key governance skills and capabilities are required.
It is how you respond to those set-backs that matters.
Whakapā mai Contact us Contact us through our new online portal, Pātaka Whenua, or by phone, email, or post.
Māori women judges have agreed to work with a group of Māori women lawyers to provide networking and mentoring support, so as to encourage young Māori women lawyers to take their careers as far as possible.