Claims to Treaty and other rights: exploring the terms of Crown-Māori negotiation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26686/pq.v1i2.4180Keywords:
The Treaty of Waitangi, Westminster democracy, Constitutional Arrangements Committee, Waitangi Tribunal, fiduciaryAbstract
This article delves further into that broad framework by considering the interplay between law and political negotiation, concepts of relationships between citizen and state, the role of rights in political debate, and the effect of concepts of indigeneity on all of these. The broad conclusion is that current legal and policy debates are constantly testing what is different about the state’s relationship with indigenous people, and when, why and how any difference is relevant. The debate must take place, but it needs to be approached with care as it touches on matters that go to the heart of our traditions of democracy and equality.
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