Statement of Intent 2013 - 2016
Table of contents
- From Our Ministers
- Ministerial Statement of Responsibility
- From Our Ministers cont...
- Chief Executive’s Introduction
- Chief Executive Statement of Responsibility
- Our Role, Functions and Approach
- Long-Term Outcomes and Strategic Direction
- Aligning Our Capability and Performance to Outcomes
- Towards Outcomes: What we will do
- Towards Outcomes: What we will do (cont...)
- Towards Outcomes: What we will do (cont...)
- Towards Outcomes: How we will measure progress and performance
- Managing in a Changeable Operating Environment
- Assessing Organisational Health and Capability
Towards Outcomes: What we will do (cont...)
Outcome Three: Ōranga ā mua
Whānau Māori are pursuing and realising an improved quality of life and citizenship for their members.
He Pae Tāwhiti Indicators |
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He Whakamārama Rationale |
It is increasingly recognised that families are both the central support structure for their individual members, and the key shaper of their members’ experiences and life choices. This presents a challenge and an opportunity for Government to support Māori and other vulnerable groups in ways which are inclusive of family and the family context and, importantly, invites and enables ownership and leadership by families. The Whānau Ora Approach has been established in response to that aspiration. Whānau Ora recognises that, despite the challenges and circumstances they face, all families have within them the collective potential to realise social, cultural and economic gains for their members. To complement this strengths-based and holistic approach Whānau Ora also focuses on building greater cross-sector and service collaboration so that families have access to more family-centred support as they set and progress towards their goals and aspirations. At a population level, most socio-economic indicators show that the outcomes enjoyed by Māori citizens and households have improved over time but that there has been deterioration relative to outcomes enjoyed by non-Māori. These population level indicators are of serious concern to Government, to Māori and to the wider community. Without effective intervention and investment, Māori demand for remedial support will place inordinate stress on public services (particularly given the Māori population age profile and growth projections) and constrain Māori participation and productivity within the economy. To that end, through the Crown – Māori Economic Growth Partnership - He Kai Kei Aku Ringa, the Government has made it a cross-sector priority to support stronger and higher quality Māori participation in the economy. This commitment spans a focus on Māori households, and lifting financial literacy; to greater skills and qualification acquisition across the Māori labour market; through to creating an enabling environment for Māori asset utilisation in current and emerging growth sectors for the national economy. |
He Pae Tata Desired Impacts |
Whānau-centred Approaches
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State Sector Effectiveness
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Whaia kia Tata Achieving the Desired Impacts |
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