• Ko te haukai a te kairangahau Māori ko te reo Māori
    Tāia, whakapuakina, whakatōkia kia puawai

    The Māori language is the food of Māori researchers
    Let it be written, spoken and implanted so that it will grow.

    Applications have been called for the new ‘Tohu Puiaki - Doctoral Completion Scholarships’ which will offer up to $20,000 each to six people completing doctorates either in English on Māori Language Revitalisation, or who are writing their thesis in Te Reo Māori on any subject.

  • Waiho i te toipoto, kaua i te toiroa
    Let us keep close together not far apart

    We have reached the end of what has been an exciting, successful and busy year here at Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga (NPM) - New Zealand's Māori Centre of Research Excellence.

  • There were six national and international keynote presenters at the 2016 NPM 7th Biennial International Indigenous Research Conference and the videos of these presentations are published on NPM's Media Centre.
     
    Please select the links below to the view the keynote talks by:
     

    Professor Linda Tuhiwai Smith 

  • Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga's Strategic Direction document outlines NPM's direction through to 2020.

    Ko te Māori e arataki ana i a Aotearoa ki te ao kei mua

    Our Matakitenga or Vision translates to 'Māori Leading New Zealand into the future' and our research realises Māori aspirations for positive engagement in national life and the future of the country.

  • A new book, written by a Victoria University of Wellington academic and supported by an NPM Publication Support Grant, argues that genuine and durable reconciliation can occur only when the importance of Māori legal traditions in the Treaty of Waitangi settlement process is recognised.

    New Treaty, New Tradition—written by Dr Carwyn Jones, a senior lecturer in Victoria’s Faculty of Law and a leading academic in the area of Māori and indigenous peoples’ legal issues—will be launched at the Faculty of Law on Thursday 8 December.

  • Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga – New Zealand’s Māori Centre of Research Excellence (NPM) is currently seeding a suite of new projects that will deliver positive change through vital Māori research.

    NPM recently supported its vast network of Māori researchers and scholars around the country in developing new projects that will produce important strategic outcomes for our communities and the nation.

  • He ao! He ao! He Aotearoa!
     
    Our 2016 International Indigenous Research Conference is now over and the team here at Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga are reflecting on the events of the week, and the efforts of all of our speakers and national and international delegates who joined us in Tāmaki Makaurau and attend our 7th Biennial Conference.
     
  • Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga (NPM), New Zealand’s Māori Centre of Research Excellence, hosted its 7th Biennial International Indigenous Research Conference from Tuesday 15th - Friday 18th November, with almost 500 delegates attending from New Zealand and around the world.

    On the first night of the conference, NPM together with the Independent Māori Statutory Board (IMSB) held an event which launched the IMSB’s Māori Report for Tāmaki Makaurau 2016, and at the same time NPM’s patron Dr The Honorable Sir Pita R. Sharples announced a call for a new National Māori Research Strategy.

  • On the Monday before the start of this year's International Indigenous Research Conference, NPM successfully hosted three important pre-conference workshops:

  • The programme for NPM's 2016 International Indigenous Research Conference is now available online and for download.

    This programme details over 177 Panel, Oral, Roundtable and Academic Poster sessions and 6 keynote presentations.

    Link here to download a copy of our full conference programme

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