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In 2005 the Government provided over $30 million over a five year period to fund the MāoriFreeholdLand Project in a joint venture between the MāoriLand Court, LINZ, the Ministry of Justice and TPK to ensure the registration of all Māorifreeholdland titles and orders with LINZ.
Changes also strengthen the protections for Māoriland. For example, when whenua is
changed from Māori customary land to Māorifreeholdland, the interests of the owners
will not be individualised.
For a
full explanation, please refer to either the Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 | MāoriLand Act 1993 or the
MāoriLand Court Rules 2011
SECTION DESCRIPTION
4/55 Governor-General in council may declare land to be a Māori reserve
6/1983 Determine succession to Titi Islands lands (order)
12/75 Determination of ownership of taonga tūturu found
18(1)(a)/93 Exercise general jurisdiction of court
18(1)(b)/93 Determine the relat...
Other status types
As this update is specifically for Māori Customary Land and MāoriFreeholdLand it excludes the
following land status types that fall within the jurisdiction of the MāoriLand Court:
Crown Land
Crown Land Reserved for Māori
General Land (which maybe vested in a MāoriLand Trust)
General Land Owned by Māori (which maybe vested in a Māori
Other status types
As this update is specifically for Māori Customary Land and MāoriFreeholdLand it excludes the
following land status types that fall within the jurisdiction of the MāoriLand Court:
Crown Land
Crown Land Reserved for Māori
General Land (which maybe vested in a MāoriLand Trust)
General Land Owned by Māori (which maybe vested in a Māori
1 Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Māori Agribusiness in New Zealand: A study of the MāoriFreeholdLand Resource, March 2011; and Te Puni Kokiri, Ko ngā Tūmanako o ngā Tāngata Whai Whenua Māori – Owner Aspirations Regarding the Utilisation of MāoriLand, April 2011.
Special fixtures are arranged and advertised in accordance
with the provisions of the MäoriLand Court Rules and they
may not necessarily be listed in this publication.
As a result, from time to time the MāoriLand Court receives applications to extend existing urupā, or to set aside Māorifreeholdland, or sometimes General land owned by Māori, as new urupā reservations.
In addition, in February 2013 during the
course of the review, the Ministry for Primary Industries released a further report
prepared by PricewaterhouseCoopers: Growing the Productive Base of MāoriFreeholdLand (2013).
MāoriLand Court | Judge’s Corner
Judge D J Ambler
Although the TPK, MAF and MPI reports addressed different aspects of Māoriland,
their common theme was the enhancement of Māoriland owners’ use and...