Co-Governance - What is fact and what has been misinterpreted?
We have invited two amazing panelists, Associate Professor Khylee Quince and CEO, Hauraki Gulf Forum Alex Rogers to help us navigate this topic of discussion, that has increased its relevance in and around the election.
Get settled in with your lunch and tune in to our webinar on Thursday 26 October at midday.
KHYLEE QUINCE
Associate Professor Khylee Quince is the Dean of the School of Law, where she has been on staff since 2017. Prior to that she was the Associate Dean Maori at the University of Auckland Faculty of Law, where she was on staff since 1998.
Khylee is an expert in criminal law and justice, youth justice and Maori legal issues. She has taught and researched in these fields, and in 2014 was awarded a National Tertiary Teaching Excellence Award for Sustained Excellence, following Faculty of Law and University of Auckland Teaching Awards in 2013.
Khylee has extensive experience in governance, as chair of the New Zealand Drug Foundation, the Sursum Foundation charitable trust and as a trustee on school boards. She is regularly engaged as an expert consultant by government and non-government organisations, including the Ministry of Justice, Department of Corrections, New Zealand Police and TVNZ. She is currently a member of the New Zealand Parole Board.
Khylee Quince is of Ngapuhi, Te Roroa, Ngati Porou, me Ngati Kahungungu descent.
ALEX ROGERS
Chief Executive of the Hauraki Gulf Forum, an independent statutory board dedicated to restoring the mauri of Tīkapa Moana, Te Moananui-ā-Toi.
Alex was previously a New Zealand diplomat, and represented Aotearoa at the United Nations in New York, EU and NATO in Brussels, and APEC in Singapore.
He lives in Tāmaki Makaurau with his wife and two kids.