Table of Contents
Preface
Sir Graham Latimer, Chairman, New Zealand Maori Council
Indigenous Peoples & Justice – A Foreword
Edward Te Kohu Douglas
The Agenda for Change & its Impact on Maori Over-Representation in the Justice System
The Hon.. Georgina Te Heuheu, Ngati Tuwharetoa, Minster for Courts
The New Way: Ten Years On
John Pratt, Reader, Institute of Criminology, Victoria University of Wellington
Legal Pluralism: Reflections On The Role Of Law In Providing Justice
For Indigenous Peoples – A Canadian Context
Professor Paul L.A.H. Chartrand, Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, Canada
The Heitia Case
Judge James L. Rota, District Court, Hamilton
Marae Based Justice
The Hon. Tau Henare, MP for Te Tai Tokerau, Minister of Maori Affairs
Associate Minister of Education, Associate Minister of Corrections
Marae Based Justice
The Hon. Phil Goff, Parliamentary Labour Party Spokes-person on Justice
Judicial Functions On Marae
Colin Keating, Secretary for Justice
Imprisonment: Punishment, Rehabilitation & Community Safety- A Balancing Act Between Individual Rights Against Community Rights to Safety: What Do Our Prisons Offer?
June Jackson, Ngati Maniapoto, Member, National Parole Board
Indigenous Peoples and Justice
The Hon. Roger Sowry, Minister of Social Welfare, Work & Income
The Third Millennium - Restorative Justice or More Crime and Prisons?
Fr. Jim Consedine, National Coordinator, Restorative Justice Network, Prison
Chaplain
Developing Models To Strengthen Cultural Perspectives In Order To Reduce Recidivism
Leon Bakker and Kristen Maynard, Department of Corrections, New Zealand
Bridging The Cultural Divide: A Report On Aboriginal People And Criminal Justice In Canada, Royal Commission On Aboriginal Peoples 1995
Professor Paul L.A.H. Chartrand,, Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
Restorative Justice and the Court of Appeal’s Consideration in the Clotworthy Case
Helen Bowen, Barrister & Co-Author: Terri Thompson
Home Detention As An Alternative To Imprisonment And Its Extension Onto The Marae
Rawiri Rangitauira, Chairman Te Runanganui o Te Arawa
Imprisonment, Trapped Lifestyles, And Strategies For Freedom
Mason Durie, School of Maori Studies, Massey University