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Rebuilding the kāinga :
lessons from te ao hurihuri /

Kake, Jade,

Rebuilding the kāinga : lessons from te ao hurihuri / Jade Kake. - 160 pages ; 18 cm - BWB texts . - BWB texts. .

"In the future, this landscape is going to look very different"--Cover.

Includes bibliographical references.

Home can and should be a source of wellbeing, a place that connects us to our whanau, community, land, culture and history. Pre-nineteenth-century Maori society was complex: rich tribal economies were built and flourished, and there was a focus on valuing the whenua and resources that supported all. The dominant form of settlement and the focal point of social and economic activities were Kainga (unfortified villages). However, colonial settlement and the discriminatory policies of successive governments disrupted social structures and severed the connections to Kainga. Today, the home ownership rate for Maori is well below the national average and Maori are over-represented in the statistics of substandard housing. Rebuilding the Kainga charts the resurgence of contemporary papakainga on whenua Maori over the last three decades. Kake draws on innovative international models to sketch out a vision where Maori are supported to build businesses and affordable homes on whanau, hapu or Treaty settlement lands - and describes the policy direction needed to make this a reality.

9781988545332 1988545331

2019458191


Maori (New Zealand people)--Housing.
Maori (New Zealand people)--Land tenure.
Kāinga.
Papakāinga.
Mana whenua.

HD7288.72.N45 / K35 2019

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