Module 4 of 6
Tikanga, ture, mana whakahaere
Tikanga, law, and governance — how Māori legal frameworks challenge tech power.
rafter painting — whakapapa, law, the genealogy of governance
This module carries the kōwhaiwhai pattern itself — the rafter painting of the wharenui. Just as kōwhaiwhai painted on the tahuhu tells the genealogy of the people below, tikanga encodes the genealogy of law: the ancestral logic that governs what is permitted and what is not.
He kupu whakataki — Introduction
Tikanga Māori predates the New Zealand state by centuries. It is a living legal and ethical system — not a museum piece, not a cultural footnote, but an active framework for governing relationships between people, between communities, and between humans and the natural world. This module asks what tikanga can offer as a framework for governing data and AI.
Tikanga and data: core principles
- Mana — authority and dignity. Data about a person or community carries their mana and must be handled in ways that respect it.
- Tapu — the sacred and restricted. Certain knowledge is tapu: not freely available, requiring specific relationships and protocols before it can be shared.
- Utu — reciprocity. Those who benefit from Māori knowledge and data owe something in return to the community it came from.
- Kaitiakitanga — guardianship. Māori are not "owners" of their data in the Western sense, but kaitiaki — guardians entrusted with its care for future generations.
New Zealand law and Māori data
The New Zealand legal framework offers partial but inadequate protections. The Privacy Act 2020 provides some individual data rights, but was not designed with collective or Indigenous rights in mind. The Treaty of Waitangi is increasingly recognised as relevant to data governance, but enforcement mechanisms remain weak.
The Waitangi Tribunal has signalled that the Crown has Treaty obligations in the digital sphere. The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), which New Zealand endorsed in 2010, recognises Indigenous peoples' rights to maintain, control, protect and develop their cultural heritage, traditional knowledge, and traditional cultural expressions.
Mana whakahaere: governance on Māori terms
Mana whakahaere — governance grounded in Māori authority — requires more than Māori participation in existing governance structures. It requires governance structures that reflect tikanga values from the ground up:
- Decision-making processes that centre whānau, hapū, and iwi — not just individual data subjects
- Governance bodies with genuine authority, not advisory roles
- Protocols that distinguish between different kinds of knowledge and their different levels of restriction
- Accountability mechanisms grounded in tikanga, with consequences that carry cultural weight
Key concepts
- Tikanga Māori Customary Māori values, norms, and law
- Kaitiakitanga Guardianship; stewardship of knowledge for future generations
- Mana whakahaere Governance grounded in Māori authority
- UNDRIP UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Pātai — Discussion questions
- How does the concept of kaitiakitanga differ from Western notions of data ownership?
- Assess the adequacy of New Zealand's Privacy Act 2020 for protecting Māori collective data rights. Where does it fall short?
- What would a tikanga-based data governance protocol look like for a large government agency holding Māori health data?
- Is UNDRIP a useful tool for Māori communities seeking data sovereignty, or is it too weak to have practical effect?