Ki te Hoe webinar series session 2 - Treaty Settlements: their history, progress, outcomes and challenges, and what this means for funders
Event description
Treaty settlements: their history, progress, outcomes and challenges, and what this means for funders. Professor Margaret Mutu (Ngāti Kahu, Te Rarawa, Ngāti Whātua and Scottish descent) will share findings from interviews with over 80 Treaty negotiators and insights into the realities of the post-settlement era for hapū and Iwi.
Thursday 17 August 2023 12.15pm - 1.30pm via zoom - bring your lunch!
About Professor Margaret Mutu:
Margaret Mutu is of Ngāti Kahu, Te Rarawa, Ngāti Whātua and Scottish descent. She is the Professor of Māori Studies at the University of Auckland where she teaches and conducts research on Māori language, tikanga (law), history and traditions, rights and sovereignty, Te Tiriti o Waitangi and treaty claims against the English Crown, constitutional transformation and Māori-Chinese encounters. She holds a BSc in mathematics, an MPhil in Māori Studies, a PhD in Māori Studies specialising in linguistics and a DipTchg. She has published four books: a grammar of the `Ua Pou dialect of Marquesan (2002); the history and traditions of her hapū, Te Whānau Moana (2003); her collection of annual reviews of issues affecting Māori, The State of Māori Rights (2011); and Ngāti Kahu: Portrait of a Sovereign Nation, on the traditions, history and Tiriti o Waitangi claims of her iwi (nation), Ngāti Kahu (2017). She has also published numerous articles and book chapters and is called on frequently by local, national and international media to provide information and expert commentary.
Margaret is the chair of her iwi parliament, Te Rūnanga-ā-Iwi o Ngāti Kahu of the Far North and of two of her marae. She has been a mandated representative of Ngāti Kahu and of Māori in a number of national and international fora. She has three children, six grandchildren and a huge extended family.
Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity