
Mana tamariki mā
Help make children’s rights real in Aotearoa
Kia ora and welcome to the Children’s Rights Alliance - the collective voice for children’s rights in Aotearoa
Together, we work towards an Aotearoa where all our children and tamariki are cared for, respected and protected, have what they need, and participate in their own lives, families, whānau, communities and wider society.
CRAANZ Annual General Meeting 2025
You are warmly invited to our AGM on Wednesday 24 September 2025, 12.00 – 1.30pm
Where: Room D05, University of Otago Wellington, 23a Mein Street, Newtown, Wellington
On-line: Register to receive the Zoom link
In-person: For those joining in person light refreshments will be provided, please RSVP by Friday 19 September via this form https://forms.gle/9TMLhmeQk8kjqpab8
This year’s guest speakers are:
Natania Katene (Ngāti Toa Rangatira, Ngāti Tūwharetoa ki Taupo-nui-a-tia, Ngāruahine ki Taranaki, Ngāti Kahungungu ki Wairoa; Principal Advisor with Te Rūnanga o Toa Rangatira) and
Toni Hoeta (Ngāti Rangi, Ngāti Porou, Te Atihunui-ā-paparangi, Te Atiawa; 4th year medical student at University of Otago Wellington).
We will run through the AGM formalities, followed by our guest speakers. This year we have two proposed resolutions.
Resolution 1: We propose that CRAANZ re-register under the new Incorporated Societies Act 2022.
Resolution 2: We propose that the new Constitution for the Children’s Rights Alliance Aotearoa New Zealand (CRAANZ) be adopted at the AGM 2025 to come into effect on 1 January 2026.
Members have been sent a copy of the proposed Constitution.
We would also like to invite nominations for the 2025/2026 Steering Committee. To nominate or for more information please contact info@childrensrightsalliance.org.nz
We hope you can join us!
Thirty years of children’s rights in Aotearoa - using the past to shape the future
It has been over thirty years since New Zealand ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Thirty years on from ratification, we are at a turning point for children – now is a critical time to make children’s rights real in practice – for all children, in all circumstances, all rights.
It is, therefore, very timely that in 2023 the UN Committee on the Rights of the Children released their report on New Zealand’s progress on children’s rights.
As we commence the next review cycle, let’s use the 30th anniversary of New Zealand ratifying the Convention, to ask:
“In another 30 years-time, in 2053, when we look back, what progress will we see for children stemming from this point in time and this UN review? What do we need to do to uphold the rights of our children now, and to be good ancestors for future generations of children in our country?”
Follow the UN’s review of children’s rights in New Zealand
The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child reviewed New Zealand’s progress on children’s rights on 26-27 January 2023
It is exciting to be at this point in this, the 6th, children’s rights reporting cycle. Many thanks to all those who have contributed to our reporting over the last 3 years - the information and insights you have shared have enabled us to paint a clear picture of the current children’s rights situation in Aotearoa and, importantly, to signpost a way forward to an Aotearoa where all children experience all their rights, in all circumstances.
Read our 2022 Children’s Rights Alliance Report to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child.
Next Steps: In February 2023, the UN Committee issued a set of comments and recommendations designed to improve children’s rights situation in Aotearoa (Concluding Observations), highlighting up to 6 issues for urgent attention.
So, as one reporting cycle draws to a close, another is just beginning! Our job as civil society is to follow up on the Committee’s recommendations, using them to inform and strengthen our advocacy for children over the next reporting cycle.
We look forward to continuing to build our Alliance and working together over the next reporting cycle, to make rights real for all children in Aotearoa – all rights, all children, all circumstances.
Find out more about the UN reporting process, and read the thematic reports provided to the UN Committee, here.
“It is important to emphasise here, that when New Zealand ratified the CRC in 1993, that amounted to a promise that every single child in New Zealand was entitled to the protection of every single right provided in every single one of the 54 articles, without qualification or compromise.”
— Judge A J Fitzgerald in New Zealand Police/Oranga Tamariki v LV [2020] NZYC 117 at [72]
Nau mai, haere mai - will you join us?
Everyone is welcome to join the Children’s Rights Alliance; any child, young person, adult, family, whānau or non-government organisation who supports children’s rights, Te Tiriti O Waitangi, and the Children’s Rights Alliance’s aims and values.
Amplify your own effectiveness by joining us – together we can make a difference for children and tamariki in Aotearoa.