The Waitangi Tribunal

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The Waitangi Tribunal

The Waitangi Tribunal is a standing commission of inquiry. It makes recommendations on claims brought by Māori relating to legislation, policies, actions or omissions of the Crown that are alleged to breach the promises made in the Treaty of Waitangi.

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Tribunal exhibition He Kura Toi Tangata opens at Waitangi

On Tuesday 4 February 2025, the photographic exhibition He Kura Toi Tangata: 50 Years of the Waitangi Tribunal, 1975 – 2025 was unveiled at Waitangi.

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Hautupua

Te Aka Whai Ora (Maaori Health Authority) Priority Report

Concerning the disestablishment of Te Aka Whai Ora

Go to Hautupua

Ngā Mātāpono/The Principles

Treaty Principles Report

Interim Report on the Crown’s Treaty Principles Bill and Treaty Clause Review Policies

Go to Ngā Mātāpono/The Principles

He Whakaputanga me te Tiriti

The Declaration and the Treaty

Report on Stage 1 of Te Paparahi o Te Raki Inquiry

Go to He Whakaputanga me te Tiriti

Hauora: Report on Stage One

Health Services and Outcomes Kaupapa Inquiry

Go to Hauora: Report on Stage One

Ko Aotearoa Tēnei

Wai 262

Report into claims concerning New Zealand law and policy affecting Māori culture and identity

Go to Ko Aotearoa Tēnei
Oct 1975
Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975 passed
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1985
Tribunal gains retrospective jurisdiction to inquire into events back to 1840
1986
Te Reo Māori Claim Report
1987
1987 Lands Case
1996
Beginning of district inquiries
2015
Kaupapa inquiries commence
2030
Report Handover

Latest Reports and Publications

Wai 1718
Report

Kei Ahotea Te Aho Matua

Kura Kaupapa Māori (Dewes) Claim

Nō te rā nei ka puta i Te Rōpū Whakamana i Te Tiriti o Waitangi tōna pūrongo e kīia ana ko Kei Ahotea Te Aho Matua e pā ana ki te tono kōhukihuki i kawea e Te Rūnanga Nui, te māngai mō ngā whānau Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua. E whakapae ana ngā kaitono kīhai i tika te whai wāhitanga, te whai whakaarotanga atu a te Karauna ki Te Rūnanga Nui, ki ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori rānei i roto i te tukanga arotake me te whakahou i Ngā Kura o Āpōpō, mai i te tau 2018 ki te tau 2022.
 
Kua tuhia tēnei pūrongo ki te reo Māori. I hua ai tēnei whakatau whai muri i ngā wānanga ki ngā kaitono me te Karauna, me te whai tautoko i a rātau. Kua tāpirihia ki tētahi āpitihanga ngā upoko 3 ki te 7 kei roto i te reo Pākehā o te pūrongo, kia mārama ake ai te pūrongo.
 
Ko te whakatau a te Taraipiunara, he maha ngā takahi a te Karauna i ngā mātāpono o te Tiriti e pā ana ki te noho rangapū me te whakamarumaru i te wā o te arotake me te whakahou i Ngā Kura o Āpōpō. Kīhai te tukanga a te Karauna i eke – mai i te whakatau ki te whakaara i te arotakenga i te tau 2018, tae noa ki te pūrongo mātauranga nō te Hereturikōkā 2022 i whakatakoto i ngā kōwhiringa mō te whakahou ki ngā Minita a Hipkins rāua ko Davis. Kei ngā upoko 4 me te 5 o te pūrongo ngā taipitopito mō ēnei kitenga, me te kōrero pono e hāngai ana. Ko tētahi āhuatanga i kitea e te Taraipiunara, kāore i ea te whai wāhi a ngā kaitono ki ngā mahi waihanga kaupapa here, me te koretake rawa o te Karauna ki te whakamōhio atu ki te aronga o ngā mahi kaupapa here.
 
I kitea e te Taraipiunara e rua ngā huarahi nui i takahi ai ngā whakaritenga kaupapa here a te Karauna i ōna here Tiriti ki ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua whai muri i te whakahou i Ngā Kura o Āpōpō. Tuatahi, kīhai te Karauna i whakatinana i te rautaki me ngā kaupapa here e hāngai ana ki te whakatika i ngā hiahia o ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori, he mea takahi i ngā mātāpono o te noho rangapū, te whakamarumaru, te wairua tōkeke me te kōwhiringa. Tuarua, i kitea e te Taraipiunara he mea takahi ngā whakaritenga onāianei i ngā mātapono Tiriti o te noho rangapū me te wairua tōkeke nā te mea kāore Te Rūnanga Nui – te māngai mō ngā whānau Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua – i whai mana ki ngā whakatau whakamutunga mō ngā kaupapa here e pā ana ki ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori.
 
Nā ngā takahitanga a te Karauna i whakahāwea nuitia ngā kaitono, me te mea anō kāore i ngā kaitono te mana e tika ana kei a rātau i raro i te rangapū mahitahi o te Tiriti, ki te waihanga i ngā kaupapa here e hāngai ana ki ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua.
 
Hei whakatika i tēnei hēnga he maha ngā tūtohunga a te Taraipiunara, tae atu ki te tohutohu kia mahitahi te Karauna me ngā kaitono ki te waihanga i ngā kaupapa here mō ngā Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua ki ngā kaupapa pēnei i te hanga whare, te tautoko i te marau, me te whakamahere whatunga. Mō te pae tawhiti, e tūtohu ana te Taraipiunara kia ū te Karauna ki te whakatū i tētahi rōpū mātauranga whaimana motuhake – ko te tikanga ka waihangatia tōna korahi me āna mahi ki te taha o te hunga whaipānga Māori, tae atu ki ngā kaitono. Kei te upoko 7 te roanga ake o ngā taipitopito mō ngā tūtohunga a te Taraipiunara.
 
 
Kei Ahotea Te Aho Matua is a report on an urgent claim bought by Te Rūnanga Nui and the Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua whānau it represents. The claimants allege that the Crown did not sufficiently involve or consider Te Rūnanga Nui or Kura Kaupapa Māori in the Tomorrow’s Schools review and reform process, from 2018 to 2022. 
 
The report is produced in te reo Māori. This decision was made following discussion with, and support from, the claimants and the Crown. English versions of chapters 3 to 7 of the report are included in an appendix, to assist in understanding of the report.
 
The Tribunal found the Crown breached Treaty principles of partnership and active protection in several instances during the Tomorrow’s Schools review and reform. It found the Crown’s process throughout lacking – from the decision to initiate the review in 2018 to the August 2022 education report that provided Ministers Hipkins and Davis options for reform. These findings, and the relevant factual narrative, are set out in detail in chapters 4 and 5 of the report. A consistent theme the Tribunal found was insufficient involvement of the claimants in key policy development steps, and very poor communication from the Crown on the direction of policy work.
 
The Tribunal found that the Crown’s policy arrangements in the wake of the Tomorrow’s Schools reforms breach the Crown’s Treaty obligations to Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua in two critical ways. First, the Crown has failed to implement bespoke policy and strategy to address the needs of Kura Kaupapa Māori, in breach of the principles of partnership, active protection, equity, and options. Secondly, the Tribunal found current arrangements breach Treaty principles of partnership and active protection because power to make final decisions on policy settings affecting Kura Kaupapa Māori is not shared with Te Rūnanga Nui, who act on behalf of Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua whānau.
 
The Crown’s breaches caused considerable prejudice to the claimants, including that the claimants do not have the powers they should, under the Treaty partnership, to shape policy applicable to Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua. 
 
To remedy this harm, the Tribunal made several recommendations, including that the Crown work with the claimants to develop specific policies for Kura Kaupapa Māori Te Aho Matua in areas like property, curriculum support, and network planning. In the longer term, the Tribunal recommended that the Crown commit to establishing a stand-alone Kaupapa Māori education authority, the precise scope and functions of which are to be developed with Māori stakeholders, including the claimants.
 
 
31 Mar 2025
Size: 15.73MB
Hautupua PP
Report

Hautupua: Te Aka Whai Ora (Maaori Health Authority) Priority Report, Part 1 — Pre-publication Version

Wai 2575 - The Health Services and Outcomes Kaupapa Inquiry

On Friday 29 November 2024, the Tribunal released Hautupua: Te Aka Whai Ora (Maaori Health Authority) Priority Report, Part 1 in pre-publication format. The report was the result of a priority inquiry granted in May 2024 into claims concerning the Crown’s disestablishment of Te Aka Whai Ora – the Māori Health Authority. These claims were previously the subject of an urgent inquiry that was vacated when the Crown introduced the Pae Ora (Disestablishment of Māori Health Authority) Amendment Bill on 27 February. The panel for the inquiry was Judge Damian Stone (presiding), Professor Susy Frankel FRSNZ, Professor Tom Roa, Tania Simpson ONZM, and Linda Tuhiwai Smith CNZM.

The Tribunal decided to inquire into and report on the priority claims in two parts: the first part concerns the disestablishment and its impacts only. The second part will focus on the Crown’s alternative plans for Māori health. Part 1 of the Te Aka Whai Ora (Māori Health Authority) priority inquiry was conducted on the papers with no in-person hearing.

The Tribunal found that the Crown breached the principles of tino rangatiratanga, kāwanatanga, good government, partnership, active protection, and redress. The Crown did not act in good faith when disestablishing Te Aka Whai Ora as it did not consult with Māori. Without consulting its Tiriti/Treaty partner and without substantive advice from officials, the Crown decided that Te Aka Whai Ora was not required, despite knowledge of grave Māori health inequities.

Māori did not agree with the Crown’s decisions but were denied the right to self-determine what is best for them and hauora Māori. Instead, the Crown implemented its own agenda – one based on political ideology, rather than evidence – without even following its own process for the development and implementation of legislative reform. As the establishment of Te Aka Whai Ora was a form of redress for the Crown’s long-standing failure to reflect tino rangatiratanga in the health system, its unilateral decision to remove effectively took that redress away. The Tribunal found that these Tiriti/Treaty breaches caused significant prejudice to Māori.

The Tribunal recommended that the Crown commit to revisiting the option of a stand-alone Māori health authority, consult extensively with Māori in the development of any alternative plans, and always undertake proper regulatory impact analysis in matters that affect Māori health.

 

28 Nov 2024
Size: 1.59MB
Wai 3300 Ch6
Report

Ngā Mātāpono/The Principles: Part II of the Interim Report

Wai 3300 - Tomokia ngā tatau o Matangireia - the Constitutional Kaupapa Inquiry

On Tuesday 5 November 2024, the Waitangi Tribunal released Ngā Mātāpono/The Principles: Part II of the Interim Report of the Tomokia Ngā Tatau o Matangireia – The Constitutional Kaupapa Inquiry Panel on The Crown’s Treaty Principles Bill and Treaty Clause Review Policies in pre-publication format.

This updated report responds to further evidence provided to the Tribunal on the policy development process for the proposed Treaty Principles Bill since May 2024, including the Cabinet paper on the proposed Bill.

The earlier findings and recommendations in the Tribunal’s initial interim report have not changed. Rather, this updated report consists of an additional chapter (chapter 6) that makes further findings on these specific matters.

Regarding the Crown’s policy development for the Bill, the Tribunal found the Crown’s process to develop the Bill has purposefully excluded any consultation with Māori, breaching the principle of partnership, the Crown’s good-faith obligations, and the Crown’s duty to actively protect Māori rights and interests. The Tribunal also found this policy process to be in breach of the principle of good government, as Cabinet has decided to progress the Bill despite it being a policy that is not evidence-based, has not been adequately tested, has not been consulted upon, and fails regulatory standards.

The Tribunal analysed how the proposed content of the Bill does not reflect the texts or meaning of the Treaty/te Tiriti. The Tribunal commented that Principle 1 misinterprets the kāwanatanga granted to the Crown in 1840, which is not an unbridled power restrained only by its own sense of what is in the best interests of everyone. Cabinet’s approval of Principle 2 for introduction in a Bill was found to be a breach of the principles of tino rangatiratanga, kāwanatanga, partnership, and active protection. The Tribunal commented that Principle 2, if enacted, would revoke the promises and guarantees the Queen made to Māori in 1840. The Tribunal held that Principle 3 bears no resemblance to the meaning of article 3 and that Cabinet’s decision to introduce the principle in a Bill was a breach of the Treaty/te Tiriti principles of partnership, equity, and active protection. 

The Tribunal found that these breaches caused significant prejudice to Māori. The Tribunal found that Māori would be particularly prejudiced by the extinguishment of tino rangatiratanga in a legal sense if the Bill were to be enacted. Among other effects, the new principles would apply to all legislation where the Treaty/te Tiriti might be considered relevant. The Tribunal also found that the new principles would advance the discredited agenda of assimilation, as they are designed to end the distinct status of Māori as the indigenous people of this country. The Tribunal commented that, even if the Bill were not enacted, Cabinet’s decision to introduce the Bill would prejudice Māori by further damaging the Māori–Crown relationship. Māori would also feel the brunt of the social disorder and division caused by the introduction of the Bill, including through the select committee process.

The Tribunal confirmed its previous recommendation that the Bill be abandoned. If the Government does not abandon the Bill, the Tribunal recommended that, given the constitutional significance of the issue, the Bill be referred to the Tribunal under section 8(2) of the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975.

The Tribunal reserved its jurisdiction to hear further evidence and submissions concerning the Bill, should it be enacted.

 

06 Nov 2024
Size: 6.04MB

Tribunal
News

Report of the Waitangi Tribunal’s Strategic Direction Review Group

25/03/2025, 2:48 pm
On 21 March 2025, the Tribunal's Strategic Direction Review Group released its report
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Statement of the Chairperson regarding the resignation of Hon Richard Prebble

5/03/2025, 9:54 am
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