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Jack Hunn’s early career was spent in the Public Trust Office and in the Public Service Association. In 1946 he became an Inspector in the Public Service Commission (later the State Services Commission). In 1960 he was appointed temporary head of the Maori Affairs Department. Walter Nash, the Prime Minister and Minister of Maori Affairs, asked Hunn to undertake an accounting of Maori assets. Hunn commissioned a series of wide-ranging studies on Maori population, housing, education, employment, health, crime and land titles. He put these into a comprehensive report on the state of Maori. It painted a disturbing picture of Maori on the social and economic margins.
Hunn claimed that integrating Maori into Pakeha society was the answer, rather than strengthening their separate cultural identity. He welcomed the growing urban Maori population as it was the "quickest and surest way of integrating the two species of New Zealander", and would prevent a "colour problem".
Critics were quick to point out that Hunn did not understand a growing Maori desire to strengthen their cultural identity. Hunn pointed out that his report was a discussion document, and the Nash Labour government did not publish it during their term. But it strongly influenced the National government’s Maori policies during the 1960s.
See also: biography of Jack Hunn at DNZB website