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Identifying what makes Māori-led housing successful - Coggle Diagram
Identifying what makes Māori-led housing successful
What makes targeted housing projects successful?
Developer resources
Government/specialised agency management/involvement
Resources to direct into the project (funds, time, staff, priority/need)
Accessibility to resources/assets
Policies, plans, law can enable/disable certain actions being taken by different groups
Socio-economic situation
Economic - banking policies (interest), prospects of delivery (non-profit/for profit)
Social/political dynamics - Community/stakeholder opinion/support/backlash, political agendas (targeted housing might be or not be a priority)
How is success defined in delivery for Māori? (from initial literature)
What are successful outcomes?
Authentic representation of cultural needs
Fit-for-purpose and scale (whanau, koumatua, Individuals)
Longevity (maintains stability, economically, socially, environmentally)
The process of delivery aligns with Te Ao Māori
Effective collaboration, leadership, community engagement
What is considered Māori-led?
Māori organisations/individuals lead the vision and implementation approaches
Cultural values, practices and perspectives are grounded into the project
The process utilises Māori decision-making process and leadership
What is the purpose of Māori-led housing?
what makes it different from other cultural related housing schemes?
Non-statutory development (not government, not private sector), separate to papakainga,
Small scale developer/site
Medium/high density - compared to papakainga
Non-exclusive to mana whenua
Is it an equitable approach to addressing housing for Māori?
Resource and planning burden
Accessibility of planning resources (process, language-specialist, interaction), funding, time, management (financially, socially, allowing for flexibility/hiccups)
What is the role of policies and plans in facilitating successful outcomes
Zoning rules in enabling Māori-led residential housing
Density/dwelling specifics
Design flexibility
Land titles and legal ownership
Adaptability of Māori circumstance
The result of urban shift alienated significant populations of Māori
Many Māori in urban areas are not mana whenua
The social/political/cultural place of them in zoning and policies