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Richard Morris

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Te Kōputu o Te Whakatōhea: A Tikanga of Gathering and Sharing to Guide Future Kai Sovereignty

DOI
10.20507/MAIJournal.2026.15.1.3
Online First
Article type
Journal article
First Published
2026-04-22
Keywords
Te Whakatōhea
kaumātua
kai security
māra kai
whakakitenga-nui
future landscape planning
kai sovereignty
Author(s)
Shannon Davis
Richard Morris
Te Kahautu Maxwell
Isobel Happy

The story of Te Whakatōhea is indistinguishable from its relationship with kai. Starting with the iwi’s migration narratives from Hawaiki to Aotearoa New Zealand, through an economic flourishing that followed initial contact with European settlers, then as a matter of survival following raupatu, kai has been an integral component of Te Whakatōhea culture and tikanga. Today this relationship with kai is manifest in the industry-leading aquaculture enterprises of the iwi; however, there are also serious challenges present in terms of its people’s nutritional wellbeing, with access to fresh kai in the Ōpōtiki rohe limited for a high portion of the population.

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Te Kōputu o Te Whakatōhea: A Tikanga of Gathering and Sharing to Guide Future Kai Sovereignty
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