What does it take to keep the home fires burning in Aotearoa, and why is the term “land back” synonymous with climate action? Find out with Nadine Hura and Ruia Aperahama, in a series brought to you by Te Kōmata o Te Tonga.
How do we clean up the mess of colonisation and poor land-use decisions? How can those who’ve kept the home fires burning transition to a new (ancient) way of life that benefits both land and people?
What’s the connection between colonisation and climate change, and how does the story of climate adaptation change when indigenous people are telling it?
What does it take to keep the home fires burning in Aotearoa, and why “land back” synonymous with climate action? Find out in Ko Papa Ko Rangi season 2, Ahi Kaa with Nadine Hura and Ruia Aperahama.
Join Sacha McMeeking, Anita Wreford, Jodie Kuntzsch examine what we know about “costing climate change”, what we don’t know, and perhaps even what we don’t know we don’t know.
Ronji Tanielu, Carolyn Kousky and Belinda Storey interrogate the role of insurance now, and what it might need to play an effective and equitable role in climate adaptation.
Shaun Awatere and Jen Margaret explore how our economy and economic frameworks have evolved and been impacted by past decision-making, and what this could mean for our future with a changing climate.
Ruia Aperahama and Kate Turner join Māni Dunlop to discuss if we are capable of making decisions that return to Papa and Rangi value greater than what we have taken.
For the first season of Ko Papa Ko Rangi, we discuss the work that is underway across Aotearoa to quantify the costs of climate change, including the costs of adaptation or of failure to adapt. Hosted by Māni Dunlop.