Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 July 2020
As a result of Grey’s purchasing, native title was finally defined and thus conclusively made, but as a consequence Māori began to be dispossessed of most of their land, just as the Aboriginal people of Australia had been or would be.1 It might be argued, therefore, that in the end it mattered not a jot that the British government treated Māori as though they were sovereign and the owners of the land. Yet in the last forty or so years this historical fact has come to matter a great deal.
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