![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() These conceptual and practical limitations have produced settlements that continuously (re)produce the Crown's sovereignty and that have paradoxically compounded, rather than resolved, historic grievances. It argues that holding critiques of modern settlements alongside this history of settling grievances reveals that particular ideas about nation, sovereignty, authority, and time have, and continue to, condition what is made possible in settlements of Māori grievances. history of settling grievances in a region named Taranaki. The modern era of settlements has attracted widespread attention however, in New Zealand there is a substantial tradition of the Crown investigating and ‘resolving’ the claims and grievances of Māori, the Indigenous people. Negotiated settlements and reconciliations are increasingly used to address the historic grievances of Indigenous peoples in settler-colony nations. ![]()
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