Abstract

Identifying, contacting and engaging missing shareholders constitutes an enormous challenge for Māori incorporations, iwi and hapū across Aotearoa New Zealand. Without accurate data or tools to har-monise existing fragmented or conflicting data sources, issues around land succession, opportunities for economic development, and maintenance of whānau relationships are all negatively impacted. This unique three-way research collaboration between Victoria University of Wellington (VUW), Parininihi ki Waitotara Incorporation (PKW), and University of Auckland funded by the National Science Challenge | Science for Technological Innovation catalyses innovation through new digital humanities-inflected data science modelling and analytics with the kaupapa of reconnecting missing Māori shareholders for a prosperous economic, cultural, and socially revitalised future. This paper provides an overview of VUW's culturally-embedded social network approach to the project, discusses the challenges of working within an indigenous worldview, and emphasises the importance of decolonising digital humanities.

Highlights

  • Rere ki uta Rere ki tai Tau mai te manu Pitakataka ki to pae eFly inland Fly coastward The bird settles And flits about its perchThe impact of nineteenth-century Maori land confiscations is a lived experience in Aotearoa New Zealand today

  • Kimihia te Matangaro - Finding the Missing is a multidisciplinary research project grounded in Indigenous frameworks that combines generative modelling and probabilistic thinking with culturally-tuned semantic web/linked open data (CIDOC-CRM) knowledge engineering to enable data interoperability and Bayesian record linkage

  • Kimihia te Matangaro - finding missing Maori shareholders is a local challenge with real world impact and one of universal import

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The impact of nineteenth-century Maori land confiscations is a lived experience in Aotearoa New Zealand today. Kimihia te Matangaro - Finding the Missing is a multidisciplinary research project grounded in Indigenous frameworks that combines generative modelling and probabilistic thinking with culturally-tuned semantic web/linked open data (CIDOC-CRM) knowledge engineering to enable data interoperability and Bayesian record linkage. The interrelationship between whanau [family], whenua [land], and te reo [language] frames our engagement with Parininihi ki Waitotara [2020] (PKW) and its shareholders, determines our Journal of Data Mining and Digital Humanities. ISSN 2416-5999, an open-access journal http://jdmdh.episciences.org research aims and objectives, and enables the co-design of technical solutions co-located in the social and cultural networked realities of matauranga Maori [Maori knowledge]. This paper provides an overview of VUW’s culturally-embedded social network approach to the project, discusses the challenges of working within an Indigenous worldview, shares some preliminary findings, and emphasises the importance of decolonising digital humanities

BACKGROUND
INDIGENOUS FRAMEWORKS
Comprehending a Possible
Findings
CONCLUSION
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