Youth Leadership Grants in New Zealand: Building Tomorrow's Leaders in Aotearoa

Youth leadership development in New Zealand builds the rangatahi (young people) who will lead communities, organisations, and government in the decades ahead. In Aotearoa, youth leadership has a distinctly bicultural character — Māori and Pasifika young people bring unique strengths and face unique barriers, and the most effective leadership development honours their culture and identity. Grant funding supports youth councils, rangatahi leadership programs, civic youth engagement, mentoring, and the organisations that identify and develop young New Zealanders' leadership potential.

Youth leadership in New Zealand

The rangatahi leadership opportunity

  • New Zealand's youth population is growing and diversifying
  • Māori and Pasifika young people will be an increasing share of the working-age population
  • Young New Zealanders who develop leadership skills early contribute more to communities
  • Youth leadership development creates civic engagement that persists into adult life
  • Many youth leadership programs are under-resourced relative to need

Barriers for Māori and Pasifika rangatahi

  • Systemic disadvantage limits access to leadership programs
  • Many programs are designed for Pākehā contexts and don't fit Māori or Pasifika values
  • Economic barriers (costs, location, time demands of programs)
  • Lack of role models in formal leadership positions
  • Institutional racism in program design and delivery

What youth leadership looks like in NZ

  • Rangatahi ora (youth wellbeing) as the foundation for leadership
  • Whakapapa and cultural identity as leadership strengths
  • Collective leadership alongside individual development
  • Civic engagement through youth councils and advisory groups
  • Entrepreneurship and social enterprise
  • Community service and hauora (health) programs

Government youth leadership support

Ministry of Youth Development

  • Youth development funding
  • Youth week and youth voice initiatives
  • Young New Zealanders' grants

Te Ara Whakamana / Youth Employment

Youth employment and leadership development.

Local government

Youth councils (almost every council), youth advisory groups, youth ambassador programs.

Te Puni Kōkiri

Māori youth development programs.

Philanthropic youth leadership funders in NZ

The Tindall Foundation

Youth and community development.

Todd Family Foundation

Youth education and leadership.

JR McKenzie Trust

Youth development and social inclusion.

The Lion Foundation

Community and youth programs.

The Community Trust (various)

Regional youth leadership programs.

Rotary New Zealand

Youth leadership, exchange, and service programs (RYLA, RYPEN, Youth Exchange).

The Duke of Edinburgh's Hillary Award

New Zealand's version of the Duke of Edinburgh's Award — voluntary, service, skills, and adventurous journeys.

Types of funded youth leadership programs

Rangatahi leadership development

  • Māori youth leadership programs (kura kaupapa, kohanga reo leadership pathways)
  • Pasifika youth leadership (church-linked, community-led)
  • Youth leadership for young people from disadvantaged backgrounds
  • Leadership programs for youth with disability

Civic youth engagement

  • Youth councils (local government advisory)
  • National youth advisory groups
  • Model Parliament and mock United Nations
  • Youth political engagement programs
  • Civic action projects

Mentoring

  • Rangatahi mentoring by successful community leaders
  • Career mentoring with leadership components
  • Peer mentoring within schools
  • Cross-cultural mentoring programs

Entrepreneurship and social enterprise

  • Young social entrepreneurs
  • Innovation challenges for youth
  • Business mentoring for rangatahi
  • Social enterprise incubation for youth

Outdoor and experiential leadership

  • Hillary Award (formerly Duke of Edinburgh)
  • Outward Bound New Zealand
  • Outdoor education with leadership focus
  • Environmental leadership programs

Arts and cultural leadership

  • Young Māori cultural leaders
  • Pacific youth in arts leadership
  • Creative industries youth leadership

Sport leadership

  • Captain and leadership programs in youth sport
  • Junior coaching development
  • Volunteer leadership in sport organisations

Community service

  • Youth volunteering programs
  • Service leadership
  • Rangatahi in community development

The bicultural dimension

Youth leadership in New Zealand that ignores or sidelines Te Ao Māori is incomplete. Effective leadership development for Māori rangatahi:
- Grounds leadership in whakapapa and tikanga
- Centres collective responsibility alongside individual ambition
- Connects rangatahi to iwi and hapū as leadership contexts
- Includes te reo Māori as a leadership tool
- Learns from kaumātua and tīpuna as leadership models

Grant applications for youth leadership that are genuinely bicultural — not just adding a karakia as tokenism — are more appropriate and more effective for Māori rangatahi.

Grant application considerations

Cultural grounding

Applications for Māori and Pasifika youth leadership must demonstrate genuine cultural authenticity — designed with and by community, not imposed on it. Tokenistic cultural elements in otherwise Pākehā programs are not credible.

Equity focus

Many youth leadership programs serve already-advantaged young people. Applications that specifically serve youth from disadvantaged communities — low decile schools, rural communities, youth in care — address a genuine equity gap.

Outcome tracking

"Leadership development" is difficult to measure, but not impossible. Applications with alumni tracking, civic participation data, and employment or education outcomes are more credible than those only measuring satisfaction.

Network and peer

Individual leadership programs matter, but cohort programs — where rangatahi build relationships with each other — create lasting networks that sustain leadership development beyond the program.


Tahua's grants management platform supports youth leadership funders in New Zealand — with participant tracking, outcome measurement, alumni engagement data, and the reporting tools that help rangatahi leadership funders demonstrate their investment in Aotearoa's next generation of community leaders.

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