This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. Learn more

Law Notes Legal Foundations (LAWS110) Notes

Te Aotahi 2 May 2019 Notes

Updated Te Aotahi 2 May 2019 Notes

Legal Foundations (LAWS110) Notes

Legal Foundations (LAWS110)

Approximately 168 pages

The notes are from lectures and tutorials for legal foundations from a high achieving student from the lecturer John Hopkins and Sasha.

The course aims to provide a foundation in the skills of legal research and legal writing together with an academic grounding in topics fundamental to the New Zealand legal system. The course will involve training by way of proactive exercises in legal research and legal writing. It will also examine the historical development of New Zealand's legal system, f...

The following is a more accessible plain text extract of the PDF sample above, taken from our Legal Foundations (LAWS110) Notes. Due to the challenges of extracting text from PDFs, it will have odd formatting:

Laws110

2/May/2019

How do you understand the Treaty?

Overview

What the Treaty said (x2)

What happened?

Where we are currently?

Tino Rangatiratanga- self determination

How land was treated following the treaty

Follow what happened to terms over the time.

What the Treaty said

Article 1- power

  • Power- tino rangatiratanga, self determination

  • The concept of power was translated different in the Maori and English version

  • Settler community benefited more than Maori

  • Some historians think translation issues were intentional, others say it was an accident.

  • Focus on understanding the difference between the two different terms used in the concept of power

  • A power sharing arrangement, concepts of power at the heart of our existence

  • Concept of 1840 power is different

  • Media- 21st- Maori lower income levels, lower education, sad, bad etc.

  • Prior to 1840s different- 1840- majority of Maori owned all of the economic resources in NZ, greater literacy than early settlers/

  • Power imbalance for benefit of Maori, numbers, resources, know-how, acquiring from the new knowledge in New Zealand, trade internationally, before treaty Australia, Europe and south America. The relative strength and autonomy. We jump back to a time to when the settler community were reliant on Maori to survive.

  • Settler community- starving, Maori provide substance

Pre-Treaty

Power- tino rangatiratanga, self-determination, sovereignty

What existed- self determination

Sovereignty- makes a state a state, association with Queen and Empire building, essence of sovereignty no higher power to tell you what to do. Sovereignty in International Law. No other nation state can tell you what to do. Being sovereign, one government can’t bind another government to do another thing, fully powerful, make decision about your life, what is right and wrong. Make rules about anything cause you want to

  • What existed- self-determination

  • Who governed what?

  • Under what authority?

  • What rules?

  • How did it work?

Systems of power that were localized.

Before the Treaty of Waitangi there was a political and legal system that governed the exercise of power. Concepts like centralized parliamentary powers. The localized hapu system. There were rules, who had rights to make decisions. Who could access land, resources and things, who married who etc. governed relationships between people and place. This was a legal system put in place.

Notion of power is reversed

Westminster way of thinking, we expect power to be held by a top entity, right to send power down

Hapu- power at ground level, iwi gets permission from hapu to do things

There were preexisting presumptions- was a system of power and authority being exercised in New Zealand.

Article 2- what happened to land and things

Article 3- equality

Treaty

Maori version- Maori retain Tino rangatiratanga, was the equivalent to sovereignty - real authority, Maori thought they would have this.

Kawanatanga- governance- lesser thing- English crown would have governance

= sovereign – make your own future as you desire it to be.


English version
- opposite to Maori version. British crown would gain sovereign powers.

What did it mean?

Well different views…

Who has political and legal authority?

It is about the Maori making decisions of their own future.

Maori version- have right and ability to make decisions – hopes and aspirations- benefits Maori

English version- they determine the direction of the future state

Post Treaty

What happened?

  • Native Exemption Ordinance 1844

  • New Zealand Constitution Act 1852

Then…

  • Combine it with limited influence and participation over mainstream decision making

Gave Maori the right to govern themselves in certain areas, early constitutional experiment, in particular areas exercise their authority- things changed in the 1860s

Up to 1860s there was no much competition for land

Efforts to follow Treaty, until competition for resources between English and Maori. Competition for resources, court system, 1877 pivotal decisions

How did that happen?

Wi Parata- Treaty is a legal nullity

c. 1877

What were the consequences?
Maori had a lack of authority over own affairs

Treaty deemed to be a matter of honor; government has a moral obligation to think about the Treaty of Waitangi.

Courts free reign- don’t have to think about concepts of power sharing.

If you don’t have much moral protection,...

Buy the full version of these notes or essay plans and more in our Legal Foundations (LAWS110) Notes.