Module 2 of 6

Te Pā Tūwatawata hei tauira

Te Pā Tūwatawata as a model for Indigenous-led digital infrastructure.

Tohu o tēnei akoranga — Module symbol
Pā tūwatawata

palisaded village — collective protection, bounded community

This module carries the pā tūwatawata — concentric circles representing the palisaded village. The innermost circle is the whānau; the outer rings are hapū, iwi, and the wider world. Sovereignty radiates outward from the centre, not downward from the state.

He kupu whakataki — Introduction

Te Pā Tūwatawata is not only a concept — it is a living experiment in Māori-controlled digital infrastructure. This module examines what the project is, where it came from, and why it matters as a model for thinking about how Indigenous communities can reclaim control over their digital futures.

The name itself is instructive. A pā tūwatawata is a palisaded village — a place of protection and collective life, defined by its boundaries. The metaphor speaks to a digital architecture built on the logic of the marae: communal, governed, and bounded by tikanga rather than by corporate terms of service.

"A pā is not a wall to keep the world out — it is a structure that makes collective life possible on our own terms."

What is Te Pā Tūwatawata?

Te Pā Tūwatawata is an initiative to build Māori-controlled digital infrastructure — data storage, computational resources, and governance frameworks that sit outside the dominion of Big Tech platforms. Rather than relying on Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, or Microsoft Azure, it envisions infrastructure owned and operated by Māori entities, governed according to tikanga Māori.

The global context: Indigenous data sovereignty

Te Pā Tūwatawata is part of a global movement. The Global Indigenous Data Alliance, the CARE Principles for Indigenous Data Governance, and similar frameworks in Canada, Australia, and the United States all reflect a shared recognition: that digital colonialism is a real and present threat, and that Indigenous communities must build their own alternatives rather than wait for states or corporations to act.

The CARE Principles — Collective Benefit, Authority to Control, Responsibility, Ethics — offer a counterweight to the FAIR data principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) that dominate mainstream data science. Where FAIR maximises openness, CARE centres relationships and power.

"The question is not whether Māori data will be used — it will be. The question is who governs how it is used, and in whose interest."

Key concepts

Pātai — Discussion questions

  1. What does the pā tūwatawata metaphor tell us about how Māori think about the relationship between community and infrastructure?
  2. How do the CARE Principles differ from the FAIR data principles, and why does this distinction matter?
  3. What are the practical challenges of building iwi-controlled cloud infrastructure at scale?
  4. Can a project like Te Pā Tūwatawata coexist with mainstream tech platforms, or does it require a complete break from them?

Te Pā Tūwatawata as a Model — Social toolkit

Activity — Design your own digital pā

If you were building a digital pā for your community — who would be inside? What tikanga would govern access? Who would be the kaitiaki? Draw the walls, the gates, the protocols.

What if digital infrastructure was designed like a pā — built for collective protection, governed by tikanga, owned by the community? Module 2 of this free course shows it already exists. tepatuwatawata.io 👉 [link] #TePāTūwatawata

A pā was a fortress and a community system. Te Pā Tūwatawata is doing the same thing — for Māori data. Servers on marae. Tikanga-governed. Māori-owned. Free course. Link in bio. #KiwiDialectic #MāoriDataSovereignty

1/ Te Pā Tūwatawata is the most important infrastructure project in Aotearoa that most people have never heard of. Here's why it matters. 🧵 2/ It's a decentralised, iwi-designed, Māori-owned data storage network. Servers physically located on marae and in Māori organisations — not in US data centres. 3/ Governance is by tikanga and kawa — not corporate terms of service. Each iwi co-designs its own protocols. Tino rangatiratanga is the architecture. 4/ It's S3-compatible and open-source. So it works with existing tech. But it refuses to hand control to corporations or the state. Data stays with the people it came from. 5/ This is what sovereignty looks like in the digital age. Free course on why it matters 👉 [link] #TePāTūwatawata #MāoriDataSovereignty

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Hashtag bank — copy as needed

#KiwiDialectic #MāoriDataSovereignty #TinoRangatiratanga #AIActivism #TeReoMāori #KaupapaMāori #TePāTūwatawata #IndigenousRights #Aotearoa #DataSovereignty #SovereignFutures #Pā Tūwatawata