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Show Notes
In 1841 a few tiny islands of Pākehā settlement existed in an ocean of Māori land. Today, that picture has reversed & Māori own a fraction of Aotearoa. A big part of the reason? The Native Land Court.
Large chunks of land changed hands through the Native Land Court; or as it was also known: Te Kooti Tango Whenua - The Land Taking Court. Created by the 1862 Native Lands Act, the court was meant to establish individual land ownership under the new British colonial government. In practice it began a process of land alienation for Maori that continued until the 1990s.
Watch the video version of the episode here
In this episode we discuss:
- The right of preemption and the large crown land purchases in the 1840s and 50s.
- How these purchases contributed to increasing Māori opposition to land sales.
- How Māori opposition to land sales contributed to the New Zealand Wars.
- The different ways Māori and Pākehā thought about land.
- How and why the court was first established.
- The racist attitudes of some judges and officials.
- The impact of the "1840 rule" and the "10-owners rule", including the sale of the Heretaunga block.
- How debt was used to ensnare Māori in the court.
- The negative impacts of attending court on Māori.
- How Māori attempted to reform or remove the court in the 19th century, including the efforts of the Kotahitanga movement.
- The efforts of Māori MPs to slow down the loss of Māori land in the early 20th Century.
- The 1965 Māori Affairs Amendment Act and how it acted as a catalyst for protest movements.
- How those movements achieved reforms, including Te Ture Whenua Māori Act.
- The ongoing impacts of the Native Land Court and attempts to address injustices.
For more on this subject:
- Te Kooti Tango Whenua by David Williams
- Illustrated History of New Zealand by Judith Binney
- Ka Whawhai Tonu Matou: Struggle Without End by Ranginui Walker
- Conquest by Contract: Wealth Transfer and Land Market Structure in Colonial New Zealand by Stuart Banner, Law & Society Review