• Whakawaiwaitia te reo kia kōrero

    Whakawaiwaitia te reo kia tika

    Whakawaiwaitia te reo kia Māori



    Nei rā te whakatau hei arataki nei i a tātou,

    Hāunga rā mō te wiki, mō te Mahuru Māori rānei,

    Heoti, mō āke tonu anō.



    Whakatōkia te reo ki te hirikapo ihumanea,

    Kia tīparehia te matenga

    Hei huia kaimanawa māu,

  • Earn some money over summer! Work with some of Aotearoa's leading academics! Gain valuable insight into the research world!



    Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga's 2019-2020 summer internships are now open for applications from interested students.



    $6000 stipends are available for each internship, over 10 weeks.

  • NPM has developed and confirmed eight new seed and scope research projects that will deliver innovative, inspiring and impactful research, and initiate and lead to transformative outcomes.



    Te Reo me ngā tikanga Māori

  • An important issue gaining a great deal of profile and traction online and in the media recently has been the ethnic makeup of professors and academics at New Zealand Universities.



  • What are the distinctive dimensions and drivers of innovative Māori leadership and integrated decision-making? And how do these characteristics deliver pluralistic outcomes that advance transformative and prosperous Māori economies of well-being?



  • NPM applauds the Waitangi Tribunal’s landmark report calling on the Government to act urgently to address the nation's ongoing governance of water rights, which is in breach of Te Tiriti o Waitangi / the Treaty of Waitangi principles.



  • Is harakeke one key to a sustainable future for Aotearoa and, if it is, how do we utilise it to develop this sustainable future?



    The NPM project Harakeke for a Sustainable Future in Whakaki, is being led by Dr Simon Hills from Massey University and has been examining the interface between mātauranga Māori and ecological science related to harakeke.

  • Ka ora te whenua, ka ora te tangata – When the land is healthy, people are healthy



    Ka ora te tangata, ka ora te whenua – When people are healthy, the land is healthy