Kererū Marae Pātaka Raraunga | Kererū Marae Whānau/ Hapū Database
click here for our Registration Page
Our data/ information is a taonga, that will help to connect and contribute to the future growth of our two hapū.
Hapū Registry Data provided will be held and managed by the Kererū Marae Committee, primarily as a hapū-based population record. Secondly, the information can be used by the Kererū Marae Committee to contact and distribute any necessary information to whānau who give their express permission and to assist and inform other Marae working groups i.e. Kererū Marae Rōpū Hauora (Health Group) in relation to Marae-based mahi and kaupapa.
No identifying information will be shared or distributed to any person, entity or organisation without permission
Why register?
To be notified of important issues and decisions regarding settlement affecting Kererū Marae;
For the purposes of adding to the population database
To receive information about general and other important hapū matters;
and to provide a platform for Hapū and whānau-led rangatiratanga and mana motuhake for future generations
Who can register?
To be eligible to register you must whakapapa to Ngā hapū o Kererū Marae; and whāngai on their own behalf or by their legal Ngā hapū o Kererū Marae guardian.
Hapū Data Governance Model
Vision- Data for whanaungatanga, hapū and Marae development, enactment of self-determination
Guiding Values-
Nurture and protect data as a taonga
Use data for the good of whānau-hapū.
Put ownership of the data and its use in the hands of the whānau
Decolonise data ecosystems*
Desired Outcomes-
The right response, at the right time, in the right way.
Data and data systems are crucial for enabling this to happen. Individuals would never be in a position where they are forced to give up data in order to access the Marae. It is your choice!
Better shared and autonomous decision making.
The goal is for a data system that enables insights that are timely, relevant and responsive to the priorities and needs of the whānau-hapū. This will support both shared and autonomous decision-making
A trusted and safe data system.
All whānau and whānau members should be able to participate in a data system that is safe and trustworthy.
Data to drive whānau-hapū economies.
Data and data systems should support thriving whānau-hapū hauora, economies and collective wealth generation.
Supporting whānau to flourish.
Whānau are the heart of our Marae. Data and data practices need to accurately reflect whānau lives and circumstances, and support them to live in ways that are meaningful to them.
Reaffirming and strengthening connections to identity, place and te reo Māori.
Whakapapa is central to our identity, connecting our whānau and whenua in ways that provide a crucial sense of belonging and connection – a sense of home. Data and digital innovation will be built on values that allow our whānau-hapū. to be in good relations with each other, our environments, and our language and culture.
Principles-
Rangatiratanga
Leadership that focuses on common purpose while also respecting the autonomy and independence of our whānau-hapū.
Whanaungatanga
Strong transparent relationships through whakapapa, respect, integrity, empathy and commitment to the kaupapa.
Kaitiakitanga
A shared understanding of respect, guardianship, care and protection for data as a strategic and valued resource, recognising that for Ngā Hapū o Kererū, data is a taonga and we are the collective kaitiaki over our taonga.
Manaakitanga
To protect and look after the data that whānau provide and the ethical data-use that contributes to Marae whānau-hapū aspirations.
Data Pou-
1. Data Capacities and Development
2. Data Infrastructure
3. Data Collection
4. Data Protection
5. Data Access, Sharing and Repatriation
6. Data Use and Reuse
7. Data Quality, Systems Integrity
8. Data classification
Definition
Decolonizing data reclaims the indigenous value of data collection, analysis, and research; prioritizes data for indigenous people, by indigenous people; and recognizes the inherent strength of indigenous people. By decolonizing data, indigenous communities determine the information they want to gather, think through why they are gathering it, and know who is interpreting the data and if the interpretation is being done in a way that serves the community. Put simply, decolonizing data is when indigenous peoples control their stories and information. Too often, data is collected and presented in a way that perpetuates the narrative of poverty and need, painting a portrait of disparity and deficit.