PAPER: Empowering Māori in conservation law

URL: https://doi.org/10.26686/pq.v13i2.4657

Reversing the decline in NZ’s biodiversity: empowering Māori within reformed conservation law.

May 2017

Ruru J, O'Lyver PB, Scott N, Edmunds D 2017. Reversing the decline in New Zealand’s biodiversity: empowering Māori within reformed conservation law. Policy Quarterly 13(2)

ABSTRACT

Creating new conservation law that more holistically and comprehensively supports hapū and iwi leadership in conservation management should be embraced as a critical step towards reversing the decline of Aotearoa New Zealand’s biodiversity. Treaty of Waitangi settlement statutes (for example, the Te Urewera Act 2014) and new conservation policies and practices (for example, the Department of Conservation’s Conservation Management Strategy Northland 2014–2024) throughout the country are strongly recognising the need for tangata whenua to be more involved in the conservation and management of New Zealand’s biodiversity. It is timely for conservation law itself to be reformed to better reflect and support these recent advancements. Conservation law reforms should reflect and support the intent of hapū and iwi to act as kaitiaki (guardians) of New Zealand’s biological heritage.

KEYWORDS

biodiversity, conservation law reforms, Treaty of Waitangi, national parks, National Policy Statement on Indigenous Biodiversity, Conservation Act, Treaty settlements and the conservation estate, Te Urewera Act

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