Kāinga Tahi, Kāinga Rua: The Role of Marae in Reimagining Housing Māori in the Urban Environment

Author:

Lee-Morgan Jenny1,Penetito Kim Himoana1,Mane Jo2,Eruera Ngahuia2ORCID,Evans Kaatewairua3,Linaker Luella4,Mio Baari5,Newton Pania6,Waa Moana6,Ropati Hineamaru7

Affiliation:

1. Pūrangakura Māori Research Centre, Auckland 1022, New Zealand

2. Pūrangakura Māori and Indigenous Research Centre, Auckland 1022, New Zealand

3. Manurewa Marae, Auckland 2022, New Zealand

4. Papakura Marae, Auckland 2110, New Zealand

5. Mataatua Marae, Auckland 2022, New Zealand

6. Makaurau Marae, Auckland 2022, New Zealand

7. Papatūānuku Kōkiri Marae, Auckland 2024, New Zealand

Abstract

The supply of, and demand for, housing in Aotearoa, New Zealand, is in a state of crisis. With all other areas of social deprivation, Māori are impacted disproportionately in the housing space, and have been locked out of the housing market. In order to address this crisis, a range of government, community and iwi initiatives have been established in Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland) to provide various housing interventions, from emergency housing, accommodation supplements and subsidies to transitional housing, home ownership programmes and papakāinga (Māori settlement, village) development opportunities. Marae Ora, Kāinga Ora (MOKO) is a Kaupapa Māori (Māori approach) research project created to explore the role of marae (cultural centre) and kāinga (village, settlement) in supporting the wellbeing of whānau (family group), hapū (extended kinship grouping), iwi (extended kinship–tribal grouping) and communities, which includes the potential provision of housing. Five marae in the South Auckland landscape are partners in this research and bring to life the prospect of their contribution to housing solutions for their local Māori communities. This article presents some valuable insights into the aspirations of each whānau involved with the five marae with regard to their perspectives and developments with marae-led housing provision.

Funder

NZ Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment Endeavour Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference49 articles.

1. Amore, Kate, Viggers, Helen, Baker, Michael, and Howden-Chapman, Phillipa (2013). Severe Housing Deprivation: Good-QUALITY Housing: The Problem and Its Measurement, Statistics New Zealand.

2. Anderson, Atholl, Binney, Judith, and Harris, Aroha (2015). Tangata Whenua: A History, Bridget Williams Books Ltd.

3. Auckland Council (2021, June 24). Auckland Council Unitary Plan: H 27 Special Purpose–Māori Purpose Zone, Available online: https://unitaryplan.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/Images/Auckland%20Unitary%20Plan%20Operative/Chapter%20H%20Zones/H27%20Special%20Purpose%20-%20Maori%20Purpose%20Zone.pdf.

4. Auckland Council (2020, January 30). Makaurau Aerial View Map, Available online: https://www.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/geospatial/geomaps.

5. Awatere, Shiloh, Pauling, Craig, Rolleston, Shad, Hoskins, Rau, and Wixon, Karl (2008). Tū Whare Ora: Building Capacity for Māori Design in Sustainable Settlement Development, Routlege.

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