Aotearoa’s first M?ori professor of law who is regarded as one of the country’s leading M?ori legal scholars wants to see more M?ori working in the sector.
Jacinta Ruru, who has lectured at Otago University since 1999, has been made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit.
She said it was a recognition of the wider work going on to make law in New Zealand more inclusive of tikanga M?ori.
She said students studying law needed to learn that New Zealand’s first legal system was M?ori laws.
“We have a really strong vision, bicultural, bilingual, bijural, and we have a huge amount of support from across the legal profession, including our deans, the leaders of our law schools, our colleagues and our current students and alumni.”
Ruru is positive the pace of change is picking up.
Her own example is that she went 20 years at Otago University as the only M?ori person lecturing law, but in the past 18 months that had expanded to three.
Ruru said it was crucial New Zealand’s law schools became more diverse, particularly for M?ori and Pacific people.
Earlier this year she told RNZ that tangata whenua had to resort to creating their own journals in order to have their voices heard.
“To succeed as a scholar you must be published, that is a requirement of our job.”
Global publishers were a big part of the problem, she said.
“M?ori don’t feel that the mainstream publishing journals are very welcoming of us.
“As a scholar, as an academic, you’re wanting to get your journal articles into those journals where there is high readership and that’s those mainstream journals and for the most part, that is not where indigenous peoples are publishing.
“Our M?ori academics and our indigenous scholars around the world are not getting their work published in those realms and that is of major concern.”
Professor Ruru has published widely on indigenous peoples’ rights, interests and responsibilities to own and care for lands and waters.
She is a strong advocate for decolonising the tertiary sector, including legal education. She has co-founded many initiatives including the University of Otago M?ori Academic Staff Caucus, Te Poutama M?ori, and the M?ori teaching and learning research theme Poutama Ara Rau.
She co-directed Ng? Pae o te M?ramatanga, New Zealand’s M?ori Centre of Research from 2016 to 2021. She was one of the first M?ori women to be elected Fellow of the Royal Society Te Ap?rangi. She holds Ministerial appointments to Te Papa Tongarewa Museum of New Zealand Board and K?hui Wai M?ori, the M?ori Freshwater Forum.
Professor Ruru’s contributions have been recognised by the Prime Minister’s Supreme Award for Excellence in Teaching and an inaugural University of Otago Sesquicentennial Distinguished Chair.