 Wai No
 |  Report/Purongo
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5 | Land Tax Report In 1979, the secretary of the Te Tii (Waitangi) B3 Trust asked the Waitangi Tribunal to make representations in connection with the imposition of land tax on land administered by trustees under section 438 of the Maori Affairs Act 1953.
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11 | Report of the Waitangi Tribunal on the Te Reo Maori Claim Claim Wai 11, the te reo Maori claim, was brought by Huirangi Waikerepuru and Nga Kaiwhakapumau i te Reo and concerned the official recognition of the Maori language.
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15 | Report of the Waitangi Tribunal on the Te Weehi Claim to Customary Fishing Rights Report In September 1984, the Tribunal received claim Wai 15 from Tom Te Weehi and Reremoana Hauraki. They claimed that the Fisheries Act 1983 and regulation 8(b) of the Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 1983 were contrary to the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi in restricting them in the exercise of fishing rights.
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19 | Report of the Waitangi Tribunal on a Claim Relating to Maori 'Privilege' In February 1985, Mr D McMaster filed a claim with the Waitangi Tribunal alleging that a number of special privileges were accorded to Maori people by virtue of their race, and that these privileges were at variance with the Treaty of Waitangi.
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22 | Interim Report to the Minister of Maori Affairs on State-Owned Enterprises Bill Wai 22 concerned a series of claims from the five most northerly tribes from the North Cape. Asking the Tribunal to investigate whether it was likely to be prejudiced by the enactment of the State-Owned Enterprises Bill, that such prejudice is contrary to the principles of the Treaty, and that the claimants should be granted relief in the form of some exemptions from the Bill or other amelioration of the terms of the Bill.
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26, 150 | Report of the Waitangi Tribunal on Claims Concerning the Allocation of Radio Frequencies In June 1986, the Waitangi Tribunal received a claim from Huirangi Waikerepuru on behalf of Nga Kaiwhakapumau i te Reo which sought to reopen the proceedings that had resulted in the Tribunal's just-released Report on the Te Reo Maori Claim. The claim alleged that the Crown had breached the Treaty by failing to await the Tribunal's recommendations before introducing a Bill on the Maori language to Parliament and that Maoridom's claim for radio frequencies and a television channel and resources were being denied.
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176 | Report on Broadcasting Claim Claim Wai 176 was lodged with the Tribunal in early 1991 by Huirangi Waikerepuru and Graham Latimer.
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264 | Report on Waikanae Railway Lands In 1992, the Crown-Congress Joint Working Party proposed a scheme for the disposal of 3605 square metres of surplus Railways lands at Waikanae.
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264 | Report on Wellington Railway Lands In 1992, the Crown-Congress Joint Working Party sought a scheme for the disposal of surplus Railways lands in the Wellington region
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264 | Report on Auckland Railway Lands In 1992, the Crown-Congress Joint Working Party proposed a scheme for the disposal of surplus Railways lands on the Tamaki isthmus in Auckland.
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264 | Report on South Auckland Railway Lands In June 1991, the National Maori Congress claimed that the disposal of surplus Railways assets without a prior arrangement or agreement with local Maori would be contrary to the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi.
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307 | The Fisheries Settlement Report 1992 In late 1992, the Waitangi Tribunal inquired into several claims concerning a September 1992 settlement between the Crown and Maori on fisheries, commonly known as the Sealords deal. Hearings took place at the end of September and the beginning of October, and the Tribunal, which consisted of Chief Judge Eddie Durie (presiding), Bishop Bennett, Hugh Kawharu, and Joanne Morris, released its report in November.
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321 | Appointment to the Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commission Report In 1992, Hariata Gordon lodged a claim on behalf of herself and Ngati Paoa which concerned the appointment of members to the Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commission under the Treaty of Waitangi (Fisheries Claims) Settlement Act 1992.
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350 | Maori Development Corporation Report The Maori Development Corporation Report of 1993 concerned the proposed sale by the Government of its shares in the Maori Development Corporation.
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413 | Maori Electoral Option Report The Maori Electoral Option Report concerns the exercise by Maori of the Maori electoral option under section 76 of the Electoral Act 1993, by which Maori may elect whether to register on the Maori roll or the general roll.
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449 | Kiwifruit Marketing Report 1995 Claim Wai 449 was lodged in 1994 by kiwifruit growers Marata Norman and Wi Parera Te Kani on behalf of themselves, their whanau, and their iwi, who claimed that legislation which gave the New Zealand Kiwifruit Marketing Board a monopoly to export kiwifruit to all foreign markets except Australia violated their right to exercise te tino rangatiratanga over their own affairs.
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718 | The Wananga Capital Establishment Report The Wananga Capital Establishment Report relates to a claim by three wananga Maori established as tertiary education institutions under the Education Act 1989. The claim concerned the failure of the Crown to recognise the right of Maori, in terms of the Treaty of Waitangi, to receive capital funding, in order to provide properly for the education of Maori through programmes, and in an environment, designed to enhance their tertiary educational opportunities.
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776 | Radio Spectrum Management and Development Interim Report Claim Wai 776 was received on 9 March 1999 and registered the next day. It was lodged by Rangiaho Everton and concerned a part of the electromagnetic spectrum known as the radio spectrum, which can be used for telecommunications and information technology in general (for example, the internet, cellular phones, video links, and video conferencing can all make use of it).
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776 | Radio Spectrum Management and Development Final Report Claim Wai 776 was received on 9 March 1999 and registered the next day. It was lodged by Rangiaho Everton and concerned a part of the electromagnetic spectrum known as the radio spectrum, which can be used for telecommunications and information technology in general (for example, the internet, cellular phones, video links, and video conferencing can all make use of it)
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796 | The Petroleum Report In the report the Tribunal addresses claims by Nga Hapu o Nga Ruahine of Taranaki and Ngati Kahungunu of Hawke’s Bay and Wairarapa in relation to their interests in the petroleum resource.
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953 | Ahu Moana: The Aquaculture and Marine Farming Report The Wai 953 claimants represent Ngati Kahungunu, Ngati Whatua, Te Atiawa ki te Tau Ihu, Ngati Koata, Ngai Tahu, and Ngati Kuia. They claim to have a broad relationship with the coastal marine area and that as an incident of that relationship they have an interest in aquaculture, or more particularly marine farming.
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1024 | The Offender Assessment Policies Report On Monday 10 October 2005, the Waitangi Tribunal released its report on certain policies and procedures used by the Department of Corrections in relation to the assessment of offenders. The Offender Assessment Policies Report considered two specific assessment tools (tests) that were designed and used by the department. The tools helped to identify and assess offenders who were at high risk of reoffending, and were intended to assist the development of programmes that could work towards reducing Maori reoffending.
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1071 | Report on the Crown's Foreshore and Seabed Policy This report is the outcome of an urgent inquiry into the Crown’s policy for the foreshore and seabed of Aotearoa-New Zealand. The many claimant groups represented in the inquiry comprised most of the coastal iwi.
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1177 | Interim report of the Waitangi Tribunal on the Te Tai Hauauru Wai 1177 was lodged by Whatarangi Winiata on behalf of registered Maori voters in the electorate of Te Tai Hauauru, both for himself and in his capacity as interim president of the Maori Party. Broadly, the claim concerned the polling arrangements made by the chief electoral officer in preparation for the by-election taking place in the Te Tai Hauauru electorate on 10 July 2004.
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1298 | The Report on the Aotearoa Institute claim concerning Te Wananga o Aotearoa The Wai 1298 claim, made by Harold Maniapoto and Tui Adams on behalf of the Aotearoa Institute Te Kuratini o Nga Waka Trust Board, is summed up by the claimants as concerning the future of wananga in New Zealand, and in particular that of, Te Wananga o Aotearoa. The Wai 1298 claim concerns disputed issues of control over Te Wananga o Aotearoa, what it can teach, and to whom. The claim arises out of the tension between the Crown’s right and responsibility to govern and the self-determination or autonomy of the founding iwi, as found in and practised by its wananga.
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