Search results for "te karae 1 section 77"

Found 1745 items matching "te karae 1 section 77".

Maori Land Update 2013

  1    Māori Land Update –   Ngā Āhuatanga o te whenua  June 2013 | Pipiri 2013  This update is issued by the Office of the Chief Registrar, Māori Land Court | Te Kooti Whenua Māori  as  part  of  the  ongoing  efforts  to  help  inform  and  assist  owners,  organisations  and  government  agencies about the characteristics of Māori Freehold and Māori Customary Land.                  ...

Documents/Maori-Land-Updates/Maori-Land-Update-2013.pdf (149 kb)

Maori Land Update 2012

1 Māori Land Update – Ngā Āhuatanga o te whenua June 2012 | Pipiri 2012 This update is issued by the Office of the Chief Registrar, Māori Land Court | Te Kooti Whenua Māori as part of the ongoing efforts to help inform and assist owners, organisations and government agencies about the characteristics of Māori Freehold and Māori Customary Land.

Documents/Maori-Land-Data/Maori-Land-Update-2012.pdf (132 kb)

Maori Land Update 2013

  1    Māori Land Update –   Ngā Āhuatanga o te whenua  June 2013 | Pipiri 2013  This update is issued by the Office of the Chief Registrar, Māori Land Court | Te Kooti Whenua Māori  as  part  of  the  ongoing  efforts  to  help  inform  and  assist  owners,  organisations  and  government  agencies about the characteristics of Māori Freehold and Māori Customary Land.                  ...

Documents/Maori-Land-Data/Maori-Land-Update-2013.pdf (149 kb)

4. Aotea Notice of hui

NOTICE OF MEETING OF ASSEMBLED OWNERS Part IX Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 In the Māori Land Court of New Zealand Aotea District TAKE NOTICE that applications have been made to the Māori Land Court at Whanganui for a meeting of the owners of Waimarino 3F No 4 Block to consider lease proposals and other governance matters in respect of the land, including competing proposals properly before the Court. 1.

Documents/Landowner-notices/4.-Aotea-Notice-of-hui.pdf (64 kb)

The Covid Response

04 Jun 2020  |  News

In addition, while it remains important that kanohi-ki-te-kanohi justice is conducted in our courthouses, which play an important role as the local face of justice for our communities, we should endeavour to use alternative measures such as telephone conferencing, zoom and or AVL if this is more suitable to Māori land owners and ultimately assists Māori land owners’ access to justice.