ka ora te whenua, ka ora te tangata

when the land is well, the people are well

OUR KAUPAPA

STREETSCAPES

How streets, neighbourhoods, and cities are designed, used, and contested, and how this shapes safety, access, and everyday life.

(RE)CLAIMING INDIGENOUS ENVIRONMENTS

Upholding mana whenua in the making of place, including relationships to whenua, cultural landscapes, Indigenous-led design, and decolonising planning and development.

HOUSING & HOME

How people access and experience home, including affordability, tenure and security, quality, and pathways for whānau housing.

KNOWLEDGE, NARRATIVES & POWER

How spatial knowledge is produced and communicated, whose stories are centred, and how evidence, data, and storytelling influence decisions and outcomes.

Can’t find what you’re looking for?

Spatial Justice defined.

Spatial Justice refers to how space, resources, access and power are distributed.

Indigenous Spatial Justice asks whether Indigenous peoples’ rights, relationships and authority are recognised in the shaping of place.

Māori Spatial Justice recognises that in Aotearoa, just space must uphold te ao Māori, Te Tiriti o Waitangi and Māori rangatiratanga, so that whenua and the built environment support Māori presence, wellbeing and futures.