Unit 2: Decolonized Aotearoa History - Centering Māori Agency, Resistance & Sovereignty

Counter-narrative to colonial histories, highlighting Māori perspectives and ongoing fight for tino rangatiratanga

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Focus Pātai for the whole wānanga

  • Can historical injustice ever be truly "settled"? What would real reconciliation look like?
  • How has the Waitangi Tribunal changed the relationship between Māori and the Crown?
  • After five lessons tracing 800+ years, what is your answer to "What is Aotearoa's story?"

This capstone lesson synthesizes the entire unit arc. Return to Focus Pātai from all five lessons.

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Learning Intentions (kaiako version)

Guide ākonga to understand the Waitangi Tribunal process, evaluate settlement outcomes, and synthesize the unit's arc from pre-colonial innovation through resistance to modern redress.

  • Explain the role, powers, and limitations of the Waitangi Tribunal.
  • Analyze case studies of Treaty settlements and their ongoing impacts.
  • Evaluate whether settlements achieve "redress" or merely "compensation."
  • Synthesize the entire unit by creating a timeline connecting all five lessons.
  • Form a personal position on what true reconciliation requires.
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Success Criteria (ākonga-facing)

  • I can explain what the Waitangi Tribunal does and what powers it has (and lacks).
  • I can describe the key elements of a Treaty settlement using a case study.
  • I can construct a unit timeline connecting events from Lessons 1-5.
  • I can articulate my own position on whether settlements achieve justice.
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Te Mātaiaho threads visible in this lesson

  • Tangata Whenuatanga Ā· PS4: Ākonga examine how iwi have navigated complex legal and political processes to assert mana motuhake.
  • Mātauranga Māori: Settlement elements often include cultural redress (place names, urupā return, co-governance)—not just financial.
  • Te Tiriti-honouring practice: Critical analysis of whether settlements honor te Tiriti's promises or merely offer pragmatic compromise.
  • Citizenship: Understanding our collective responsibility for acknowledging and addressing historical injustice.

Effective from: Term 1 2026 refresh · Review: 8 Poutū-te-rangi 2026

Whakatūwhera - Te Hokinga Mai (The Return)

Redress is not just about money—it is about the return of mana to the land, and the land to the people. Papatūānuku (Mother Earth) is the foundation of identity. When land is returned, healing can begin, not just for the people, but for the waterways and forests as well.

"Toitū te whenua, whatungarongaro te tangata." - The land remains when the people have disappeared.

šŸ‘©ā€šŸ« Teaching Instructions – Understanding the Waitangi Tribunal

Use the Waitangi Tribunal Cases Handout to introduce the Tribunal's function, famous cases (Te Reo Māori claim, Ngāi Tahu settlement), and ongoing debates.

Haerenga Ako – Lesson Flow (75 minutes)

1. Whakatūwhera · The Long Arc of Unit 2 (10 mins)

Begin with karakia. Display the unit journey visually and ask: "In Lesson 1, we saw innovation. In Lesson 2, resistance. In Lesson 3, transformation. In Lesson 4, activism. What do you predict Lesson 5 is about?"

Teacher moves

  • Review the unit Focus Pātai from each lesson—project or display them.
  • Introduce the concept of "redress"—what does it mean to try to make something right?
  • Pose the central dilemma: Can historical injustice ever be truly "settled"?

2. Waitangi Tribunal Overview (15 mins)

Teach the structure and function of the Waitangi Tribunal using the handout and the RNZ explainer video below.

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Investigates

Researches historical evidence of Treaty breaches.

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Recommends

Advises the Government on how to fix things (not binding).

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Cannot Enforce

The Crown decides whether to act. Most private land cannot be returned.

Key stats: Established 1975. Retrospective claims allowed from 1985. Over 2,500 claims filed. Major settlements: Ngāi Tahu ($170M+ 1998), Tainui ($170M 1995), Waikato-Tainui ($50M+), Ngāti Whātua (Bastion Point returned 1988).

3. Case Study Jigsaw – Settlement Analysis (20 mins)

Divide class into expert groups, each analyzing one landmark case. Then re-form to share analyses.

Te Reo Māori (1986)

Refinding: Language is a taonga.
Outcome: Māori Language Act 1987, Kura Kaupapa.

Ngāi Tahu (1998)

Claim: "Nine Tall Trees" (vast land theft).
Settlement: $170M (approx. 1% of value lost), apology, name changes.

Whanganui River (2017)

Innovation: Te Awa Tupua.
Outcome: River granted legal personhood. It owns itself.

šŸ”¬ Science Lens: Restoration Ecology

Treaty settlements are now major drivers of environmental science. The Waikato River Authority (co-governance) funds millions in wetland restoration.

  • The Physics of Flow: Reversing colonial engineering (straightening rivers) to restore natural meanders, which slows flow and creates eel habitats.
  • Legal Personhood: Granting nature rights (like the Whanganui River) aligns law with ecology—treating the ecosystem as a living whole, not "property."

šŸŒ Global Context: Truth & Reconciliation

How does NZ compare?

South Africa (1995):

Focused on Amnesty. Perpetrators confessed to avoid prison. High on "Truth," low on "Justice."

Canada (2008):

Focused on Residential Schools. Huge focus on trauma, but slow on land rights.

NZ is unique for its focus on economic redress and specific legal apologies.

Analysis questions for all cases:

  1. What was the original wrong? (Connect to earlier lessons)
  2. What did the settlement include? (Financial, cultural, symbolic)
  3. In your view, does this achieve "redress" or just "compensation"?

šŸ‘‚ Mātanga Whispers: The "Full and Final" Myth

Crown settlements often include a "full and final" clause—meaning the iwi can never complain about these breaches again.

But can you truly "settle" the loss of a culture with a check worth 1% of the land's value? Many experts argue real justice is a relationship, not a transaction. As long as the memory exists, the grievance exists.

4. Unit Timeline Construction (15 mins)

As a class, construct a comprehensive timeline connecting all five lessons.

L1
Pre-1800s Innovation
L2
1845-72 Wars
L3
Urban Migration
L4
1970s Activism
L5
Waitangi Tribunal

Synthesis questions:

  • What themes connect across all periods? (Tino rangatiratanga, land, cultural preservation)
  • How do earlier events make later events possible? (e.g., Lesson 4 activism → Lesson 5 settlements)
  • What is missing from this timeline? (Women's stories? Regional variations?)

5. Whakawhiti Kōrero – Position Statement (15 mins)

Students craft and share a personal position statement answering the unit's central question.

Position statement prompt:

"After studying 800+ years of Aotearoa history through Māori perspectives, I believe that true reconciliation requires ____________ because ____________. Evidence from this unit that supports my position includes ____________."

Output: Collect written position statements and/or audio reflections. These are the capstone Mātainuku evidence for Unit 2.

šŸ“Š Formative Assessment, Mātairea Support & Moderation Workflow

Mātainuku evidence you can hold in your hands

Collect at least three artefacts per student. This lesson's evidence should demonstrate synthesis across the unit.

  • Case study analysis sheets: Show understanding of Tribunal process and settlement components.
  • Unit timeline contributions: Evidence of connecting events across all five lessons.
  • Position statement: Capstone evidence showing synthesis, argument, and personal voice.

Mātairea differentiation moves

  • Scaffold: Provide sentence starters for position statements; offer simplified case study summaries; allow verbal presentation instead of written.
  • Extend: Research a settlement for your own iwi; compare NZ's process to truth and reconciliation in Canada or Australia; analyze current debates about "full and final" settlements.
  • Wellbeing: Position statements may evoke strong emotions—create supportive space for diverse perspectives. Some ākonga may have whānau directly affected by Tribunal outcomes.

Moderation tip: Tag uploads with U2L5-capstone and note whether evidence demonstrates Tribunal knowledge, synthesis across lessons, or evaluative reasoning.

Kaiako checkpoints after each phase

  • During Tribunal overview, check that students understand the key limitation (recommendatory only).
  • At case study jigsaw, verify each group can articulate claim, finding, and settlement components.
  • During timeline construction, listen for connections across lessons.
  • At position statements, value diverse positions—there is no single "right answer" on reconciliation.

🧺 Resources, Whānau Partnerships & Next Steps

Print & preparation checklist

  • Waitangi Tribunal Cases Handout (one per ākonga).
  • Case study cards for jigsaw (Te Reo, Ngāi Tahu, Whanganui River).
  • Unit timeline base (butcher paper, whiteboard, or digital).
  • Position statement template with sentence starters.
  • Recording device for audio reflections if collecting oral evidence.

Whānau & hapori connections

Send a pānui summarizing the entire unit and Lesson 5's focus on settlements. Many whānau have direct stake in Tribunal outcomes:

  • Iwi who have settled or are in negotiations
  • Opinions on whether settlements are adequate
  • Experiences of post-settlement governance entities (PSGEs)

Celebration opportunity: Consider inviting a community member who works in Treaty settlement or iwi governance to speak.

Beyond Unit 2: Where next?

  • Unit 3: STEM & Mātauranga – See how Indigenous knowledge systems inform science and technology.
  • Current events: Follow ongoing Tribunal claims and political debates about te Tiriti.
  • Community action: Engage with local iwi initiatives or co-governance arrangements.
  • Personal research: Investigate your own whānau/iwi history and any Tribunal connections.

Whakaaro - Reflection (Unit Capstone)

We began with innovation—the wharenui, navigation, mahi māra. We traced resistance—the Aotearoa Wars, urban survival, activism. We end with ongoing journey—settlements that acknowledge pain but cannot fully restore, and a relationship between peoples that is still being negotiated.

"E kore e hekeia te roimata mō te whenua. E kore anō e mutu te aroha mō te whenua." – The tears for the land will never dry. The love for the land will never cease.

The story is not over. You are part of it. What will your chapter contribute?

Cross-Curricular Extensions

Legal Studies

Analyze Treaty Principles Act debate; compare te Tiriti to other Indigenous treaties globally.

Economics

Evaluate settlement investment strategies; research Ngāi Tahu Holdings or Waikato-Tainui enterprises.

Geography

Map co-governance zones; analyze environmental impacts and settlement outcomes.

Philosophy

Debate restorative vs retributive justice; explore what "reconciliation" means in different cultures.