Te Aho, Linda2013-02-262013-02-262011Te Aho, L. (2011) Indigenous aspirations and ecological integrity: Restoring and protecting the health and wellbeing of an ancestral river for future generations in Aotearoa New Zealand. In L.Westra, K. Bosselmann & C. Soskolne (Eds.), Globalisation and Ecological: Integrity in Science and International Law (pp. 346-360). Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.9781443827348https://hdl.handle.net/10289/7258This paper seeks to provide a domestic example of the application of the environmental ethic of the indigenous Māori which ensures that humans are kaitiaki (guardians) of their surrounding environment by virtue of shared genealogy and how this ethic is being applied to restore and protect the health and wellbeing of the Waikato River, New Zealand’s longest. This particular river restoration project reflects many of the important aspects of ecological integrity. It serves too. as a domestic example of the most sophisticated attempt at powersharing to date between Māori and the Crown in relation to natural resources, which may be of interest to other jurisdictions.application/pdfenPublished with the permission of Cambridge Scholars PublishingMaorienvironmental ethicsWaikato RiverAotearoa/New ZealandIndigenous aspirations and ecological integrity: Restoring and protecting the health and wellbeing of an ancestral river for future generations in Aotearoa New ZealandChapter in Book