Social Cohesion Grants in New Zealand: Funding Community Connection in Aotearoa

Social cohesion in New Zealand — the sense of belonging, trust, and connection that binds communities together — has a particular character shaped by Treaty of Waitangi commitments, New Zealand's cultural diversity, and the unique relationship between Māori and tauiwi (non-Māori). Building cohesive communities in Aotearoa means honouring the bicultural foundation, welcoming New Zealand's diverse immigrant communities, and addressing the disconnection and inequality that fractures community trust. Grant funding supports neighbourhood connection, intercultural dialogue, biculturalism programs, social inclusion, and the organisations that build the social fabric of Aotearoa.

Social cohesion in New Zealand

New Zealand's cohesion context

  • Small, young nation with strong community identity traditions
  • Growing cultural diversity through immigration — Pacific, Asian, African, and Latin American communities
  • Bicultural foundations: Te Tiriti o Waitangi and the Māori-Crown relationship
  • High rates of immigration bringing new cultural communities
  • Economic inequality — house prices, wage inequality — creating divided communities
  • The Christchurch Mosque attacks (2019) demonstrated both fragility and resilience of cohesion

Cohesion challenges in NZ

  • Racism and discrimination against Māori, Pacific, and Asian New Zealanders
  • Islamophobia — accelerated by terrorist attacks
  • Economic inequality and segregated communities
  • New migrants and refugees integrating into sometimes unwelcoming communities
  • Political polarisation
  • Social media amplifying division

What cohesion looks like in Aotearoa

  • Genuine biculturalism — te reo Māori, tikanga, and Māori leadership
  • New Zealanders of all backgrounds feeling they belong
  • Communities where neighbours know and support each other
  • Trust in institutions and democratic processes
  • Intercultural exchange and friendship

Government social cohesion support

Ministry for Ethnic Communities

  • Ethnic community development programs
  • Social cohesion programs for diverse communities
  • Grants for ethnic community participation

Te Puni Kōkiri

Māori community development and cohesion.

Ministry of Social Development

Community development and social inclusion.

Ministry of Justice

Community participation in justice and civics.

Local government

Council cohesion programs, community events, and neighbourhood initiatives.

Philanthropic social cohesion funders in NZ

J.R. McKenzie Trust

Social inclusion and community belonging.

The Tindall Foundation

Community development and social cohesion.

Todd Foundation

Community and social connection.

Community trusts

Regional community development including cohesion.

Lottery Grants Board

Community programs including social connection.

Wilson Home Trust

Community inclusion.

Types of funded social cohesion programs

Neighbourhood connection

  • Neighbour Day events and activities
  • Community gardens and shared spaces
  • Block parties and street events
  • Welcome newcomer programs
  • Community notice boards and local networks

Intercultural dialogue

  • Interfaith dialogue programs
  • Cross-cultural exchange events
  • Host programs for new migrants
  • Refugee welcome programs
  • Multicultural festivals and celebrations

Biculturalism programs

  • Te reo Māori learning for tauiwi
  • Tikanga Māori education in non-Māori settings
  • Treaty education for community organisations
  • Tīkanga-based community events
  • Partnership programs between Māori and non-Māori communities

Anti-racism

  • Community education on racism
  • Bystander programs
  • Reporting and support for racism victims
  • Counter-narrative programs

New migrant and refugee inclusion

  • Welcome programs for new arrivals
  • Cultural orientation for new migrants
  • Employment and social connection for refugees
  • Language support alongside social connection

Youth social cohesion

  • Schools programs on diversity and belonging
  • Youth exchanges across cultural communities
  • Sport as a tool for youth cohesion

Research and monitoring

  • Measuring social cohesion in New Zealand communities
  • The New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study (academic)
  • Local cohesion surveys

The bicultural foundation

Social cohesion in Aotearoa cannot be built without honouring the Treaty of Waitangi and the Māori-Crown relationship:
- Cohesion programs that ignore biculturalism are building on an incomplete foundation
- Māori communities must be genuine partners in cohesion work, not afterthoughts
- The terms of social connection in Aotearoa are set, partly, by te Ao Māori values: manaakitanga (hospitality and care), kotahitanga (unity), and whanaungatanga (relationships)
- Tikanga-based approaches to community connection can enrich all communities, not just Māori

Grant applications for social cohesion in New Zealand that are grounded in the bicultural context — not just multicultural — are more appropriate and more likely to produce genuine, durable cohesion.

Grant application considerations

Treaty alignment

Applications for social cohesion in New Zealand must demonstrate genuine Treaty awareness and Māori partnership. Token biculturalism is not credible — authentic engagement with Te Ao Māori is required.

Contact, not just events

One-off multicultural festivals can feel celebratory but build limited cohesion. Applications for sustained contact — ongoing programs where different communities mix regularly — are more likely to build genuine relationships.

Addressing structural racism

Cohesion is undermined by racism and discrimination. Applications that address structural barriers to belonging — discrimination in housing, employment, and institutions — alongside community connection programs are more comprehensive.

Newcomer focus

New Zealand's immigration continues, and new arrivals face the challenge of belonging. Applications specifically building inclusion for new migrants and refugees address a significant and continuing need.


Tahua's grants management platform supports social cohesion funders in New Zealand — with community reach tracking, belonging outcome measurement, intercultural program data, and the reporting tools that help social cohesion funders demonstrate their investment in building connected, trusting communities across Aotearoa.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →