Jacinta Arianna Ruru (born 1974) is an established New Zealand academic and the first MÃÂori professor of law. Ruru is currently the Deputy Vice-Chancellor MÃÂori at the University of Otago.
Ruru completed a Master's at the University of Otago in 2001, with a thesis on the Treaty of Waitangi and national parks in New Zealand. After a 2012 Fulbright-funded PhD at the University of Victoria in Canada, Ruru returned to New Zealand and the University of Otago, rising to full professor in 2016.
Ruru's research centres on indigenous peoples' (primarily MÃÂori in New Zealand and First Nations in Canada) legal relations with land and water, from a measured and moderate perspective. She is the co-director of NgÃÂ Pae o te MÃÂramatanga (NPM) the New Zealand's MÃÂori Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE).
In addition to winning the Prime Minister's supreme award for tertiary teaching, Ruru has also been made a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand. In 2017, Ruru was selected as one of the Royal Society Te ApÃÂrangi's "150 women in 150 words", celebrating the contributions of women to knowledge in New Zealand. In the same year she was invited to give the 10th Shirley Smith Memorial Address. Her speech was "First laws: tikanga MÃÂori in / and the law".
In October 2019, Ruru was appointed one of seven inaugural sesquicentennial distinguished chairs, or , at Otago University.
In 2019âÂÂ20 Ruru was on the panel that wrote the influential report He Puapua.
In the 2022 New Year Honours, Ruru was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to MÃÂori and the law, and later that year received the University of Otago's Distinguished Research Medal.
Ruru was born in Kalgoorlie, Australia where her parents were living at the time. Through her father she is of Raukawa, NgÃÂti Ranginui, and NgÃÂti Maniapoto descent. Her mother is PÃÂkehÃÂ and was brought up in New Plymouth, and her maternal grandmother was Australian.