NPM Research to Optimise Māori Economic Performance
Press Release
12th November
2014
NPM Research to Optimise Māori Economic Performance
One of Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga’s (NPM) key research priorities is ‘Optimising Māori Economic Performance’, and NPM is pleased to announce four new research projects to address this research priority. Each project is focused on delivering outcomes that create positive impacts, enhancing the Māori economy and communities as a consequence.
The four research projects are each led by NPM researchers with expertise and demonstrated community involvement and each project adds significantly to the NPM’s research portfolio.
The four new projects are:
Critical Success Factors for Māori SMEs:
Evidence from the South
The project team
led by Dr Diane Ruwhiu
(University of Otago) will undertake
an in-depth study of southern Māori small to medium sized
enterprises (SMEs), in order to determine what the critical
success factors are for these businesses at different stages
of their company’s life-cycle. The intention is to
identify the critical points of intervention that will
assist Māori SME’s in transitioning between the different
stages of growth, what barriers or challenges they face and
how they can make the most of the opportunities they
encounter to achieve higher success rates. This research
will contribute to a deeper understanding of Māori economic
regional development.
Māori Engagement in NZs
Extractive Industry (EI): Innovative Legal
Solutions
This project team led by
Mr Andrew Erueti, (University of
Waikato) will investigate international best
practice, co-ownership and co-management models to assess
how Māori communities can most effectively engage with
Extractive Industry companies. For many years, iwi and hapū
have been side-lined as national and international EI
corporation’s mine their rohe and in Aotearoa, Maori
communities and advocates seeking to engage more effectively
with these companies have relied upon environmental law or
treaty law with mixed results. While, there is widespread
scepticism of EI by Maori, some hapū are successfully
engaging with some of these companies and reaping the
benefits. As iwi throughout the country increasingly grow
their asset base, they will have greater capacity to assert
their rights and interests in the extractive industry within
their rohe and this research will examine the implications
of not only this increased influence but also how
increasingly innovative legal methods will promote Māori
economic development through EI.
Whakairotia te
Whenua, Whakairotia te Tangata - Economic and Spatial
Modelling for informed Māori Land
Development
Dr Shaun Awatere
(Manaaki Whenua) and his team will implement
a model of how Māori land trusts and incorporations can
integrate core Māori values into their decision making
processes. The project will go beyond a business as usual
approach to modelling Māori values and will apply a
decision-making framework that actively utilises Māori
values in an integrated manner for collective land assets.
It will also look at how economic and ecological modelling
can be used for Māori land use decisions at diverse scales
and how both economic and cultural aspirations can be
balanced for the beneficiaries of collectively owned
assets.
Te Tētere Kōkiri o Te Ata:
Optimising Economic Performance of Māori Land Trusts in the
Waiariki Region
Led by Dr Robert
Joseph, (University of Waikato)
this team will identify sustainable and
scalable models of active land trust management that will
enhance the economic performance of Māori land trusts, and
also identify models of collaboration to enhance economic
performance. The research is specifically positioned in
response to an emerging need for Māori land trusts to
consider capability gaps in management; as well as the
questions posed by the He Kai Kei Aku Ringa and He Mauri
Ohooho Reports. The project will enable enhanced returns and
improve the collective asset base (and monetary wealth) held
within Māori land trusts.
These research projects will be launched on the 26th of November at an NPM research showcase during the upcoming International Indigenous Development Research Conference at Waipapa Marae, Auckland.
A PDF of this press release is available here
www.maramatanga.ac.nz
ENDS