SUMMARY
				The best-planned housing developments, with optimally 
				designed and built houses, may nonetheless fail as viable 
				communities. A possible contributing factor is the manner in 
				which individualised tenure systems tend to divorce land rights 
				from social responsibilities. Recognising this, some Māori 
				planning initiatives in New Zealand have sought to re-introduce 
				key communal or socially-based tenure principles to the planning 
				equation. For example, that of emphasing broad aspects of 
				wellbeing, and of establishing meaningful relationships with 
				stakeholders throughout the development process. This paper 
				begins by contrasting the inherent strengths and weaknesses of 
				socially-based tenure and individualised tenure, then considers 
				the implications on land tenure when the strand of land rights 
				is separated from the strand of interpersonal links or social 
				responsibilities. The paper goes on to describe early progress 
				on a research project, planned to run for approximately two more 
				years, which sets out to describe the aspirations and complex 
				factors involved in such Māori planning initiatives and the 
				degree to which they are succeeding. The research also considers 
				extra-ordinary agreements that provide “work around” solutions 
				to cater for Māori land-right preferences that are not currently 
				provided for by off-the-shelf cadastral options. Two case 
				studies are discussed, namely a village project located in 
				Hamilton and a community development located in Kaitaia. These 
				cases were selected for initial analysis based on their 
				documented use and adoption of one or more core social tenure 
				principles, as well as for having demonstrated positive social 
				outcomes over a sustained period of time. The paper establishes 
				a theoretical context and rationale for building socially-based 
				tenure principles into contemporary planning, with a suitable 
				legislative framework, and concludes that transferable lessons 
				and approaches could result.  
				1. INTRODUCTION
				The best-planned housing developments, with optimally 
				designed and built houses, may nonetheless fail as viable 
				communities. A possible contributing factor is the manner in 
				which individualised tenure systems tend to divorce land rights 
				from social responsibilities. In other words, under 
				individualised tenure it is possible to be a bad neighbour 
				without jeopardising rights in land. In contrast, the security 
				of land rights in communal land tenure systems, otherwise known 
				as socially-based tenure, depends on good relationships between 
				individuals and their belonging groups. In this kind of tenure, 
				group members may view servicing social responsibilities as 
				tantamount to paying rates. It is possible that in 
				individualising land rights, a crucial responsibility set has 
				been “lost in translation”, and that mainstream planning needs 
				to factor in communal principles better if more sustainable 
				communities are to be achieved. 
				In New Zealand, some Māori planning initiatives are 
				characterised by a recognition that communal principles are 
				crucial and need to be re-introduced to the planning equation. 
				This article describes early progress on a research project, due 
				to run to the end of 2019, that sets out to describe the 
				aspirations and the complex factors involved in such initiatives 
				and the degree to which they are succeeding. The article is 
				structured in four sections. First, this introductory section, 
				giving the context and background. Second, a brief review of 
				communal tenure in the twenty first century with particular 
				reference to characteristics of communal tenure still associated 
				with Māori Freehold Land (MFL) in New Zealand; strengths and 
				weaknesses of communal tenure; and implications of separating 
				land rights from community responsibilities in New Zealand’s 
				colonial history. Third, a summary and critique of progress to 
				date on two early case studies of Māori developments that have, 
				to different degrees, attempted to re-introduce communal values. 
				Fourth, discussion and conclusions up to this point, and 
				consideration of international cases, validation of 
				recommendations, and future research directions.
				
				2. A REVIEW OF COMMUNAL TENURE
				Communal tenure, so called to reflect the socially embedded 
				nature of its rights, still dominates right-holding in many 
				parts of the world. This includes the Pacific, where the 
				majority of land is under customary land tenure systems (Ward 
				and Kingdon 1995), Africa, where only between two and ten 
				percent of land is covered by formal tenure (Cotula 2006), and 
				even pockets of land in developed countries such as Port Meadow 
				in Oxford, England, and saeters in Switzerland and Scandinavia. 
				One complicating factor when we speak of communal and formal is 
				the consistent definition of terms. Custom is not static 
				(Cheater 1990, Ranger 1983, Mamdani 1996, Chimhowu and Woodhouse 
				2006, 2010), and formal tenure is varied. For the purposes of 
				this article, normative communal tenure (or socially-based 
				tenure) is defined as comprising land that is not openly 
				marketed and whose use-rights are not listed in any register; 
				has non-exclusive rights (excepting, in some instances, 
				homesteads); and has land rights that are bound up with the 
				duties and responsibilities associated with belonging to a 
				social group. Formal tenure (or individualised tenure) is 
				defined as having marketable land with rights that are 
				registered by the state (or sometimes by municipalities (Goodwin 
				2013b)); has exclusive rights (i.e. it is possible to forbid 
				trespassing); and has rights that are held separate from social 
				responsibilities (i.e. the land rights of bad neighbours and 
				uncaring offspring are not compromised). In practice, between 
				these two idealised extremes lies a complex continuum of locally 
				specific land tenure forms (Chimhowu and Woodhouse 2006, 353; 
				UN-HABITAT 2008). 
				Strictly, Māori Freehold Land (MFL) in New Zealand, comprising 
				6% of the land area, is not held under communal tenure at all. 
				However, MFL has retained some characteristics of communal land, 
				and for those living on general land – for example, in urban 
				centres – it performs some functions of communal land. MFL has 
				special issues associated with it that we need to be aware of 
				when we consider how Māori are attempting to build communal 
				values into planning. Its geographic location is often remote or 
				rural, and its tenure often fragmented and multiply owned. There 
				are challenges involved in raising and securing finance (banks 
				are often wary, since the land is difficult to sell should the 
				bank need to recover funds); in planning restrictions (MFL is 
				often zoned as rural, resulting in costly resource consenting 
				processes to combat more restrictive housing provisions); in the 
				lack of infrastructure (servicing is often sparse where land is 
				zoned as rural); and in the difficulties involved in gaining 
				acceptance or agreeance among multiple owners or even contacting 
				them (Durie 1998; Hutchings 2006). This research will consider 
				developments on MFL within easy driving distance of urban 
				centres (e.g. at Rapaki, near Christchurch), and on general land 
				in urban centres that has connections with MFL (see later). It 
				will also make conclusions more general by drawing on 
				international case studies, for example in Denmark, the 
				Netherlands and Africa, probably using a voluntary approach with 
				willing communities.
				
				There is a growing body of literature that seeks to understand 
				how Māori frameworks and principles can be applied within a 
				planning context to advance aspirations of Māori landowners 
				(Awatere et al. 2013; Awatere et al. 2008; Rolleston & Awatere 
				2009). Māori interests in urban development are rarely solely 
				economic, and instead draw in other aspects of wellbeing in a 
				holistic manner (Ryks et al. 2014). For example, Awatere et al. 
				(2013) stress the importance of whanaungatanga (kinship) and of 
				establishing meaningful relationships with stakeholders 
				throughout the development process in order to advance 
				aspirations. More generally, Awatere et al. (2008) offer nine 
				process-oriented Māori urban design principles which can be used 
				to guide the design of papakāinga (communal villages): 
				whānaungatanga (participation and membership); kotahitanga 
				(cohesion and collaboration); wairuatanga (embedded 
				emotion/spirit); mauritanga (essence/life force); orangatanga 
				(health and well-being); manaakitanga (hospitality and 
				security); kaitiakitanga (guardianship or stewardship); 
				rangatiratanga (leadership, identity and self-determination); 
				and mātauranga (knowledge and understanding). Similarly, 
				Auckland City Council has adopted the outcome-oriented Te Aranga 
				Māori design principles which offer practical guidance for 
				incorporating Māori values in urban design (Te Aranga 2008). At 
				a specific level, the Joint Agency Group in the Western Bay of 
				Plenty have developed Te Keteparaha mo ngā Papakāinga, a toolkit 
				to assist Māori to develop papakāinga proposals (Kingi & 
				Viriaere 2015). These and other innovations point to a growing 
				movement for Māori-focused frameworks to inform and provide for 
				development of Māori land in a way that Western frameworks have 
				not always been able to achieve. 
				In the same way, there is evidence of extra-ordinary agreements 
				that provide workaround solutions to cater for Māori land-right 
				preferences that are not currently provided for by off-the-shelf 
				cadastral options. For example, in 2011, Judge Ambler of the 
				Māori Land Court granted what he termed a “hybrid partition” 
				(Ambler 2011: 18) where land was subdivided into different 
				titles that outlined different use areas for different owners 
				whilst retaining the underlying ownership of the land in 
				undivided shares. The result bears similarities to the concept 
				of cross-lease developments, but required combinations of 
				occupation orders and trust orders to achieve its purpose. The 
				hybrid partition concept stemmed from the owners’ aspirations to 
				partition separate areas for the different owners, combined with 
				their desire to protect the land from being sold outside of the 
				family. This case expands the research question to include 
				whether regular cadastral options on offer may lack certain 
				land-right preferences acceptable to Māori, and how legislation 
				could best be modified to assist in re-introducing communal 
				principles to mainstream planning in New Zealand. Once again, 
				scrutiny of international legislation underpinning community 
				housing initiatives is planned in order to make the research 
				more general. International cases will also be used to validate 
				any recommendations.
				Where it is recognised that innovative approaches have been 
				adopted in New Zealand (Ambler 2011; Kake 2017; Kingi & Viriaere 
				2015), a gap exists in the literature in terms of ascertaining 
				the level of success of such approaches in the short and longer 
				term. There is also a gap in establishing the manner in which 
				design principles have been implemented, and the degree of 
				faithfulness to these principles, which in some cases may only 
				be at the level of lip-service. The question is also raised of 
				whether any knowledge frameworks developed could then be 
				extended to guide development and to build stronger communities 
				on a wider cross-section of land, not just Māori land. 
				Harmsworth and Awatere (2013) have raised the idea of a 
				bicultural approach with an equal emphasis on Western and 
				indigenous knowledges, but to date, such approaches are in their 
				infancy with regard to land development.
				2.1   Strengths and weaknesses
				Before considering case studies of planning attempts that aim 
				to re-introduce communal principles, it is important to 
				recognise that neither socially-based tenure nor individualised 
				tenure offer a “silver bullet.” Socially based tenure has 
				strengths, such as in the responsibilities that go hand-in-hand 
				with land rights, but also weaknesses. For example, Sara Berry 
				notes that investment by right-holders in social relationships 
				may result in patronage, nepotism, inconsistent application of 
				law and non-competitiveness in a free market, all of which have 
				inherent insecurities. She also points to an investment in 
				channels of access and a proliferation of these channels that 
				may be difficult to withdraw from and can result in unproductive 
				patterns of resource use (Berry 1989: 51). Demographics are 
				important, because population growth adds another source of 
				instability, in that even those eligible for customary rights 
				and who have regularly sent remittances home in order to retain 
				latent rights may be denied access to land where it is in short 
				supply (Goodwin 2013a: 167). 
				At the formal extreme, individualised “Western” tenure has a 
				destabilising propensity for polarisation of rich and poor 
				unless controls such as death duties, capital gains tax and 
				limits on farm size are imposed, all of which are difficult and 
				costly to administer. It is also rare to achieve controls that 
				are independent of governance and of economic systems, since the 
				wealthy often possess vested interests, have more experience in 
				negotiating bureaucracy, and wield inequitable lobbying power. 
				Furthermore, in contrast with the deeply entrenched notion of 
				communal land being held in trust for generations yet to be born 
				(Meek 1949), formal tenure tends to be myopic in its emphasis on 
				the short-term owing to factors such as finite terms of office 
				and requirements to demonstrate regular profits. Formal rights 
				are also often unfairly biased against women, offering them less 
				security than for male right holders. In addition, commoditised 
				land is vulnerable to irresponsible sales (for which male 
				household heads are notorious), and to distress sales (for 
				example to meet hospital or school fees, or to service debt). 
				Finally, formal registration, whether imposed or voluntary, has 
				a tendency to register primary rights and omit secondary rights. 
				The latter may include grazing rights, gathering wild foods and 
				materials, and the responsibility to provide food and shelter, 
				all of which are generally important threads in the safety net 
				of the poorest sector of society, and of emotional and cultural 
				well-being.
				 Between the communal and formal extremes, right-holders are 
				often denied the social safeguards of customary tenure while not 
				yet having access to the unemployment, sickness and old age 
				benefits of mature ‘Western’ tenure systems. At the same time, 
				land rights in this zone are poorly protected either by custom 
				or formal registration, with rights of the poor being 
				particularly vulnerable to opportunistic land-grabs by the rich 
				and powerful within a country or by outsiders such as 
				multinational companies (Cotula et al. 2009). Women may be 
				forced to stay in this unprotected zone longer than men if title 
				registration is blocked in their names (Chimhowhu and Woodhouse 
				2006: 347). From the point of view of governance, interim shades 
				of land tenure are often too varied to administer efficiently.
				2.2    Implications of separating land rights 
				from community     responsibilities
				It is helpful, when considering the idea of reintroducing 
				communal values in planning, to understand the implications of 
				separating the strands of land rights from links with people in 
				the first place (Goodwin 2011). This kind of separation took 
				place in New Zealand in the latter part of the nineteenth 
				century following the passing of the Native Land Act of 1865. 
				Before separating the strands, land rights are generally only 
				secure if people remain part of an integrated community, because 
				there is an inbuilt survival incentive to cooperate for hunting, 
				cultivation and fighting. However, there is an obvious catch in 
				re-introducing an element of survival into contemporary society. 
				The same difficulties emerge as when attempting to re-introduce 
				predators to wilderness areas, namely that life immediately 
				becomes less secure, especially for vulnerable groups. While 
				cutting social security benefits to the point where people need 
				to rely on their neighbours will probably foster community, it 
				will also cause suffering and is likely to contravene standards 
				to which a country has subscribed. It is difficult or impossible 
				to turn the clock back.
				After separating the strands of land links and interpersonal 
				links, land rights are secure even for uncooperative and 
				antisocial individuals, and welfare benefits are an automatic 
				right of citizenship (i.e. State security is more important to 
				survival than either whakapapa (ancestry) or teamwork). Before 
				separating the strands, rights to land are bound up with duties 
				to family, community (including retrospective and prospective 
				community; in other words, ancestors and children), and the 
				spirit world. Survival is also tied to sound relationships with 
				the natural world. After separation, duties to family, 
				community, posterity and to the natural world become voluntary, 
				personal and, with the direct link to survival removed, 
				sometimes excluded from our busy schedules.
				Another issue is that of discipline. Before separating the 
				strands, discipline is possible because excommunication from the 
				group is a real and possibly even a fatal threat. After, being 
				able to “opt out” dilutes traditional authority. National and 
				local political leaders have more authority than cultural heads, 
				and discipline becomes problematic without either the incentives 
				afforded by kinship and “being needed,” or of the threat of 
				ostracism/ excommunication. 
				Still another issue is the question of how rights are retained 
				or lost. Before separating the strands, equitable benefits and 
				group membership pass to all (i.e. no member of the group will 
				ever be denied shelter and food) but management is passed either 
				to individuals or families according to need, mana (charisma, 
				authority), ahi kā (keeping the fires burning, and the effort 
				and expense invested in this). After separation of the strands, 
				in the absence of a will, tenancy in common (established under 
				the Māori Land Court) conveys not only joint land rights but 
				management of that land. This often results in “large committee” 
				issues, and inefficient utilisation. Bottom-line food and 
				shelter benefits are now tied to citizenship and not to the 
				land. 
				Finally, before separating the strands, belonging groups share a 
				common history and usually common ancestor/s, and comprise 
				kinship units bound by love and affection. After, through treaty 
				and naturalization, nations comprise larger groups with more 
				disparate members who may have diverse histories and 
				experiences. Enhanced unity is sometimes only brought about in 
				times of war, or even sporting contests. Conversely, national 
				unity may be eroded by strengthening perceptions of being a 
				global citizen. Strong cohesion today is more often associated 
				with smaller groupings and blood lines (families) than with 
				tribes or nations. 
				3. RE-INTRODUCING COMMUNAL VALUES IN MĀORI PLANNING
				We now turn to some real-world case studies which have sought 
				to reintroduce communal values into mainstream planning 
				processes and developments. Case studies are appropriate since 
				they seek to understand real-world situations predicated on 
				‘contextual conditions’ which cannot be controlled in the same 
				way as a laboratory environment (Yin 2014: 16). Two preliminary 
				cases have been included in this paper: first, a Kaumātua 
				(elders) village project located in Hamilton, and second, the 
				Whare Ora papakāinga development located in Kaitaia. These cases 
				were selected for initial analysis based on their documented use 
				and adoption of one or more core social tenure principles, as 
				well as having demonstrated positive social outcomes over a 
				sustained period of time (longer than one year). Further cases 
				will be drawn on, both from New Zealand and internationally, to 
				validate and test the wider applicability of any conclusions.
				3.1    Kaumātua village, Hamilton
				The concept behind the Kaumātua Village project in Hamilton 
				arose from a concern regarding the living conditions of some 
				kaumātua (elders) in the city and a desire to provide them with 
				warm, safe houses. A joint venture between Rauawaawa Kaumātua 
				Charitable Trust (RKCT) and Te Runanga o Kirikiriroa (TROK) 
				enabled the housing development to be born. The project was 
				developed in two stages, with stage 1 consisting of eight units, 
				and stage 2 consisting of six units. The units comprise one or 
				two bedrooms, one bathroom unit and either an integrated garage, 
				on-site parking (uncovered or carport) or on-street parking.
				The units have been designed based on the papakāinga (communal) 
				model, where people learn to share and care for one another and 
				look after one another as a quasi-whānau (family). Physically, 
				the units are generally arranged around a central, communal 
				space (platform/area under a shade sail) to encourage community 
				interaction and passive surveillance, whilst also providing for 
				the need for private spaces within individual units. One of the 
				benefits of this layout was immediately apparent when a resident 
				fell ill and other residents could easily rally around and 
				provide support by cooking meals and watching over them. This 
				degree of support is unlikely to have occurred in more isolated 
				units, or where a communal space had not laid a foundation of 
				trust and cooperation. In the same development, the residents 
				refused the offer of a commercial gardener to mow the lawns, 
				with one of the residents insisting he was capable of doing so 
				himself. He now mows the lawns across the whole site, something 
				recognised and supported by the other residents with a koha 
				(donation) in return. These specific aspects align with the 
				principles of whanaungatanga (participation and membership) and 
				manaakitanga (hospitality and security) as design qualities 
				highlighted by Rolleston (2006) and others (e.g. Awatere et al., 
				2008). Historically, participation in Māori society included 
				responsibilities and roles in order to support the day-to-day 
				functioning of the community, and membership was founded on 
				genealogy. In this contemporary context, a comparable result has 
				been achieved by the physical layout of the development, which 
				encourages mutual support rather than isolation or segregation, 
				as well as by informal, ad-hoc agreements for mahi (work) which 
				have promoted a sense of belonging or investment in the group. A 
				telling comparison should be possible, and is planned, for a 
				second Kaumātua Village project that for a number of reasons has 
				a different layout.
				3.2 Whare Ora papakāinga, Kaitaia
				The Whare Ora papakāinga is a communal village located on the 
				outskirts of Kaitaia, a town of approximately 5,000 people in 
				Northland. This project involved former state houses being 
				relocated to the site and refurbished to house especially 
				vulnerable members of society, living in substandard or unsafe 
				conditions, in comparatively stable, affordable homes and a safe 
				living environment. The village currently comprises nine houses 
				and a childcare centre building, and on completion, is envisaged 
				to include a medical centre, social support service, industry 
				training facilities and community gardens. Residents sign up to 
				a drug, alcohol and violence free policy within the village and 
				utilise a rent-to-buy scheme to eventually own their own home.
				This development demonstrates the principle of rangatiratanga 
				(self-determination) in that it supports families to support 
				themselves, through wrap-around services such as budgeting for 
				residents to work towards their goals of home ownership. The 
				project offered trade training involved with the refurbishment 
				of the relocated houses, as well as associated opportunities for 
				sweat equity to lower costs, whereby residents were encouraged 
				to help paint and decorate houses prior to moving in. As well as 
				fostering self-determination, this builds in the concept of mahi 
				and provides opportunities for creativity to blossom.
				4.      DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
				
				The research is still in its very early stages, and no firm 
				conclusions are possible yet. One of the primary aims of this 
				paper was to establish a theoretical context and rationale for 
				building socially-based tenure principles into contemporary 
				planning, and to describe the objectives and methods of the 
				research project that is planned to run for approximately two 
				more years. Two other case studies that have also been commenced 
				already, include: first, the differently configured Kaumātua 
				Village project in Hamilton, which should provide a good 
				comparison. Second, a development in Invercargill with some 
				distinctive features. In addition to further New Zealand cases, 
				international cases are also planned, for example in Denmark, 
				the Netherlands and perhaps Africa so as to make the conclusions 
				more generally applicable and to validate recommendations. A 
				major challenge of the research is likely to be the number of 
				interrelated factors involved, and it is hoped that carefully 
				chosen case study comparisons will enable parameters to be 
				isolated and ranked.
				 The second aim of this research is to investigate a suitable 
				legislative framework to accomplish design aims. It is perhaps 
				significant that the Whare Ora papakāinga described above needed 
				the land to be changed from general land to Māori land in order 
				to utilise the papakāinga provisions in the local district plan 
				(and therefore to provide mixed-use community facilities as well 
				as housing). This required an application to, and processing by, 
				the Māori Land Court, including extensive proof of whakapapa. 
				This time consuming and costly step could have been avoided had 
				planning legislation allowed for this type of development on 
				general land to begin with. There are precedents of constructive 
				engagement between runanga/representative bodies and their local 
				district councils which have achieved pragmatic compromises over 
				papakāinga land, such as Rāpaki, and also the provisions within 
				the Whangārei district plan. Again, international legislation 
				will need to be reviewed to contextualise cases from abroad. 
				Transferable lessons and approaches from these experiences could 
				assist mainstream planning practice to improve with respect to 
				achieving viable and sustainable communities.
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				ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
				The authors would like to acknowledge both the University of 
				Otago and the Building Better Homes, Towns and Cities research 
				programme for invaluable support and funding for this project.
				BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
				David Goodwin is a Senior Lecturer at Te Kura Kairūri, the 
				School of Surveying, at the University of Otago. His research 
				interests include Māori and African land tenure, 
				archaeoastronomy and literary cartography. 
				James Berghan (Te Rarawa, Te Aupouri) is a PhD candidate at Te 
				Kura Kairūri, the School of Surveying, at the University of 
				Otago. He is a Licensed Cadastral Surveyor with an interest in 
				land development and resource management planning, particularly 
				in relation to Māori land.
				CONTACTS
				Dr David Goodwin
				School of Surveying, University of Otago
				P.O. Box 56
				Dunedin 9054
				New Zealand
				Tel. +64 3 4796540
				Email: david.goodwin@otago.ac.nz
				Web site:
				
				http://www.otago.ac.nz/surveying/staff/otago040649.html
				
				 
				James Berghan
				School of Surveying, University of Otago
				P.O. Box 56
				Dunedin 9054
				New Zealand
				Tel. +64 3 4799209
				Email: james.berghan@postgrad.otago.ac.nz