NZ to host world conference on women in sport

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: NZ to host world conference on women in sport


New Zealand will host the 8th International Working Group on Women in Sport (IWG) secretariat from 2018-2022.


One year on from its launch on International Women’s Day in 2017, Women in Sport Aotearoa has been instrumental in successfully bidding to host the 8th International Working Group on Women in Sport (IWG) secretariat from 2018-2022.

The announcement was made by Minister for Sport and Recreation Grant Robertson and Minister for Women Julie Anne Genter.

Women in Sport Aotearoa foundation board member Professor Sarah Leberman says the achievement reflects New Zealand’s strong commitment to gender equality, and will see the sport sector playing an important role both in New Zealand and internationally to lead positive change for women and girls.

The host flag will be handed over to New Zealand during the upcoming 7th IWG World Conference on Women and Sport in Gaborone, Botswana from the 17th to the 20th of May. Recently appointed New Zealand co-chair of the IWG, Raewyn Lovett, will accept the hand-over on behalf of New Zealand.

Women in Sport Aotearoa will be the lead delivery agent and will be responsible for meeting the IWG’s vision of ‘a sustainable sporting culture based on gender equality that enables and values the full involvement of girls and women in every aspect of sport and physical activity’. This will be undertaken in partnership with the steering group for the bid, including New Zealand Olympic Committee, Sport New Zealand, and Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED).

The four year secretariat will culminate in the 8th World Conference on Women in Sport to be held in Auckland in 2022 in collaboration with IWG.

Women in Sport Aotearoa launched in March 2017 and is the first national New Zealand advocacy network devoted to bringing about positive change for women and girls in sport. Co-chairs Julie Paterson, chief executive of Tennis New Zealand, and Professor Sarah Leberman, Dean Academic, Massey University, both credit their time with women’s sport organisations in the USA as pivotal in the establishment of the entity.

“We both agree that the impact of Women in Sport Aotearoa has been far more than we could have hoped for in the short time since we launched on International Women’s Day, in 2017,” Ms Paterson. “To have the mandate internationally is an incredible privilege. We are continuing on our path to ensure women and girls are visible, valued and influential in sport.” 

– –

Massey staff appointed to Marsden Fund Council

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Massey staff appointed to Marsden Fund Council


Distinguished Professor Spoonley (left) and Professor White have been appointed to the Marsden Fund Council


Pro Vice-Chancellor College of Humanities and Social Sciences Distinguished Professor Paul Spoonley and the college’s research director Professor Cynthia White have been appointed to the Marsden Fund Council.

The council is responsible for developing the strategic direction of the Marsden Fund that provides funding for investigator-initiated research in the fields of science, engineering, maths, social sciences and the humanities.

In making the announcement, research, science and innovation minister Dr Megan Woods said all the appointees were highly regarded researchers domestically and internationally and had a wide range of expertise that complemented the strengths of existing members.

Professor Spoonley, who has been appointed convenor of the council’s social sciences panel, is also a principal investigator on the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment-funded programme, Capturing the Diversity Dividend of Aotearoa New Zealand (2014-2020). He is a fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand and of the Auckland War Memorial Museum and a research fellow of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity.

Professor White will be the new convenor of the humanities panel. She has also held an honorary research fellow from the University of New England since 2012. She is currently a member on the humanities panel and is on numerous editorial boards and advisory panels, both in New Zealand and overseas.

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Farming activity taking the best of NZ to the world

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Farming activity taking the best of NZ to the world


Professor Julian Heyes, Dr Janet Reid, Professor Steve Morriss, Mr Graham Robinson and Professor Chris Anderson with one of IFSCA’s village cattle farmer groups on Sumbawa island.


Massey University is helping farmers and educators in Indonesia to build a more sustainable and successful agriculture sector through an innovative aid programme.

The East Indonesia Innovative Farm Systems and Capability in Agribusiness Activity (IFSCA) project, which is funded by the New Zealand Aid Programme, focuses on building human capability on farms and in classrooms through the University of Mataram in Indonesia, as well as infrastructure on the ground.

A delegation of Massey University staff has been in Indonesia discussing the future of the project and the success of the collaboration to date.

The project has seen the installation of important infrastructure, with structures such as cattle feeding units already built on the island Sumbawa. This visit saw Massey’s Assistant Vice-Chancellor Operations, International and University Registrar Stuart Morriss and the Bupati (mayor) of North Lombok District Dr Najmul Akhyar lay the foundation stones for a village-level grading shed for fresh fruit and vegetables. This will assist villagers to supply high-quality fresh fruit and vegetables to high-end hotels on Lombok’s tourism coast, including lettuce, capsicum, tomatoes, chilli, cucumbers and basil.

Through the IFSCA programme, farmers in North Lombok are being trained in both horticultural production and agribusiness skills. The relationship between the universities has led to postgraduate students for Massey, joint publications and the current programme, which matches expertise between the two universities in agriculture, extension, animal science and food technology.

Massey’s Professor Chris Anderson says the programme has been gaining momentum each year.

“It has been great to get the people working on both sides of this project together as they mostly work thousands of kilometres apart. The collaboration between universities and farmers has exceeded our wildest dreams and we are starting to see real changes that will benefit everyone involved,” he said.

A key sustainability target of the programme is to build capability within the agricultural extension system operating in North Lombok. This work is led by the College of Sciences’ Dr Janet Reid. Professor Julian Heyes is leading the horticultural technical programme and Professor Steve Morris is leading the animal science technical programme, with Mr Graham Robinson of the Massey Projects Office providing project management support to the team.

While in Indonesia this week, Mr Morriss chaired the fourth advisory board meeting for the project, which reflected on achievements and lessons learned over the past 12 months, and reviewed immediate and longer-term plans.

The project is part of larger university effort known as Massey University Worldwide that aims to develop the international education market as a major export earner for New Zealand and expand Massey teaching and research activity internationally. It works within agriculture, humanities and social sciences, aviation, business, emergency management, environment, health and veterinary medicine.

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Changes to New Zealand Super for Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Changes to New Zealand Super for Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters today announced proposed changes to New Zealand’s superannuation requirements that will make the system fairer for residents of Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau.
“The New Zealand Cabinet has agreed to make changes to the eligibility requirements for receiving New Zealand Superannuation and the Veteran’s Pension that will help level the playing field for people residing in the Realm counties,” Mr Peters says.
“Under the current system people must have lived in New Zealand for five years after turning 50 in order to be eligible for New Zealand Super. We will now allow residency in Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau after the age of 50 to count towards the eligibility requirements.
“This will mean that people who are eligible for New Zealand Super will be able to remain in these countries and contribute to the local economy without having to return to New Zealand just to qualify for their pension.
“These are changes which the Governments of Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau have advocated for. We will continue to work with them to ensure New Zealand’s superannuation requirements recognise the special constitutional relationships we have with the Realm countries,” Mr Peters says.
Minister for Social Development Hon Carmel Sepuloni will continue to progress these changes as a matter of priority.
The changes will take place by no later than January 2019.
ENDS

Asia Pacific Theranostics Market Key Players are Abbott Laboratories, AmeriPath and Dickinson and Company

Source: Emailwire Global Press Release Newswire – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Asia Pacific Theranostics Market Key Players are Abbott Laboratories, AmeriPath and Dickinson and Company

(EMAILWIRE.COM, March 07, 2018 ) Asia Pacific Theranostics Market was worth USD XX million in 2017 and estimated to be growing at a CAGR of XX%, to reach USD XX million by 2022. Theranostics is combination of drug therapy and diagnostics.

Theranostics can be termed as a fusion between drug therapeutics and diagnostics to optimize the drug effectiveness, safety and streamline drug development. It is a combination of medical drugs and diagnostics and also referred as pharmacodiagnostics, companion diagnostics and Dx/Rx partnering.

Browse More Details @ http://www.marketdataforecast.com/market-reports/asia-pacific-theranostics-market-5975/

Primary factors accounted for driving the market are increasing financial support for research and development for drug synthesis, to tackle new and fatal diseases, improving co-operation between diagnostic companies and drug manufacturers as well as increasing applications in disease treatment. Conversely, regulatory timelines and expensive prices of theranostic products are the factors hindering the growth of market.

The Asia Pacific market for Theranostics is segmented based on Disease Type. Based on Disease Type it is divided into Neurological Disorders, Cancers, Cardiovascular Diseases and Others. Based on geographical analysis, the market is divided into regions of China, India, South Korea, Japan and Australia. China holds the major share in the market due to presence of market leaders as well as a developed healthcare and pharmaceutical infrastructure. India is the fastest growing region due to increasing expenditure on health care, product innovation and increasing disposable income. Based on Disease Type, Neurological disorders are the holding the major share in the market due to prevalence of diseases like Parkinsons Disease, Alzheimers Disease and other prevalent diseases, meanwhile cancer diseases and cardiovascular disorders are expected to grow the fastest due to increasing risk rate and prevalence of these diseases and increasing research expenditure by pharmaceutical companies.

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Some of the key players dominating this market include Abbott Laboratories, AmeriPath, Dickinson and Company, BIOTEC Laboratories, Dade Behring, Dianon Systems, Dynacare Laboratories, Enterix, Focus Diagnostics, Pfizer and Beckman Coulter.

Market Segmentation:
1) Disease Type
Introduction
Neurological Disorders
Cardiovascular Diseases
Cancers

Scope of the Report:
Regional and country-level analysis and forecasts of the study market; providing Insights on the major countries/regions in which this industry is blooming and to also identify the regions that are still untapped
Segment-level analysis in terms of Region, by Diseases along with market size forecasts and estimations to detect key areas of industry growth in detail
Identification of key drivers, restraints, opportunities, and challenges (DROC) in the market and their impact on shifting market dynamics
Study of the effect of exogenous and endogenous factors that affect the global market; which includes broadly demographic, economics, and political, among other macro-environmental factors presented in an extensive PESTLE Analysis
Study the micro environment factors that determine the overall profitability of an Industry, using Porters five forces analysis for analysing the level of competition and business strategy development
A comprehensive list of key market players along with their product portfolio, current strategic interests, key financial information, legal issues, SWOT analysis and analyst overview to study and sustain the market environment
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Source: EmailWire.Com

Police investigating unexplained death in Wainuiomata

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Police investigating unexplained death in Wainuiomata


Location:

Wellington

At about 11pm yesterday (Wednesday 7 March) Police were called to a Wainuiomata address, where other emergency services were already in attendance.
 
Police are now investigating the unexplained death of a 40-year-old man at the address.
 
His death will be referred to the Coroner and a post-mortem conducted.
 
ENDS
 
Issued by Police Media Centre

Graduation of Wing 312 today at RNZPC, the Sir Mark Solomon Wing

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Graduation of Wing 312 today at RNZPC, the Sir Mark Solomon Wing


Location:

National News

Fifty nine new constables from Wing 312 will graduate from The Royal New Zealand Police College today, Thursday 8 March.

Wing Patron Sir Mark Solomon will be at the graduation ceremony as well as Police Commissioner Mike Bush and Minister of Police, Stuart Nash.

The wing is made up of 19 women and 40 men, the youngest is 18 and oldest 54.

Wing 312 has behind them an impressive list of previous qualifications and careers. Constable Timothy Emery has a private pilot license and Edison Dumo has an MBA and Bachelor of Science in Mathematics.


Images(s):

Largest number of female recruits ever to start at Royal New Zealand Police College

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Largest number of female recruits ever to start at Royal New Zealand Police College


Location:

National News

Today New Zealand Police is recognising International Women’s Day by preparing for the arrival of forty-two female recruits – the largest number of female recruits ever in a single Wing.

Wing 315, which has a total of 80 new recruits, begin at the Royal New Zealand Police College on Monday.

Fittingly, Dame Jenny Shipley is the Wing Patron and she will be supporting these recruits through their training. Dame Jenny was the first female Prime Minister of New Zealand.

Wing 315 recruit Kiahli Ibbetson feels honoured to have the opportunity to learn from Dame Shipley.

Funeral of Alfred ‘Bunty’ Preece

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Funeral of Alfred ‘Bunty’ Preece

It’s good to be here, even though it’s a very sad event that has brought us all together today.
May I take the opportunity to pass on the condolences of the Prime Minister, the Right Honourable Jacinda Ardern,  and a personal message of condolences from the Right Honourable Winston Peters,  who said in a text message to me last night that he knew Bunty very well, and there were many times where they’d had a quiet korero.
I’d like to acknowledge my parliamentary colleagues, the Hon Willie Jackson and Rino Tirikatene, and also Sir Wira Gardiner, who are here today.
We’re here to honour a truly great New Zealander. And it is an honour and a privilege to be able to address you and your whanau today, Bunty.
Lieutenant Alfred “Bunty” Preece, Chatham Islander, was born in 1922.  He answered the call to arms to defend our way of life against one of the most professional, well-trained, best-equipped, best-organised, military forces of evil to ever threaten mankind and our way of life. Bunty,  you did that, and you didn’t have to. The Chatham Islands is about as far away from the horrors of Europe and the war in Europe as you could imagine. But like so many, Bunty, you answered the call and volunteered.
It was interesting for me to read that Bunty actually joined the Army Service Corps originally. Not of his choice, but that’s where they suggested he should be. But undeterred in his quest to become part of the 28th Māori Battalion, he corrected that when he was deployed to Egypt. There he became a member of D Company,  affectionately known as Ngati Walkabout, because D Company was made up of tribes, iwi and people from everywhere including people from Ngāti Kahungunu rohe in the Wairarapa, and I know it included people from Rarotonga, people from Tonga, people from Samoa, and I’m of the understanding there was even a Pawnee Indian.
Bunty saw the horrors of war, more than many, and he is quoted as saying Italy is where he truly found out what it was like to be afraid. That was a feeling that was reiterated by my foster uncle Sergeant Lou Thorburn, who served in Italy as well. But that didn’t stop Bunty and in an attitude that would define his life he just kept going. He was wounded in Monte Cassino, quite badly, but he was back at the front three months later.
He would be wounded two more times before the war was out, and would also have the honour of being mentioned in dispatches.  People don’t get that for turning up, they get that for distinguished conduct.  Commissioned in the field, commanding a platoon, and briefly D Company, is recognition of his bravery and skill as a soldier and an officer.
Bunty also served in J-Force so his service was longer than just World War 2. 
He saw first-hand the effects of nuclear weapons and the total devastation that it brought. He is one of the small number who served in Egypt, Italy and with J-Force.
He returned to the Chatham Islands and raised a family, only to suffer more tragedy with the death of his son. 
He demonstrated outstanding leadership qualities not only on the battlefield, but like many of the officers of theMāori Battalion, continued in a post-war leadership role for his comrades, their families, his community and our wider community.
Today we thank you and recognise you, Bunty, for your loyal service, including service as Mayor of theChathams and National President of the 28th Māori Battalion.
Bunty’s service to New Zealand was recognised with a Queen’s Service Order.
His legacy is very much that of personal courage and leadership on the battlefield, and in the community. He was an outstanding Māori leader and New Zealander. One we should all look up to.
As Minister of Defence, and a former serving Māori soldier, I am proud of the fact that the battle honours won by the Māori Battalion are today carried by the Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment, creating an enduring link between the men of the Māori Battalion and those men and women serving in the New Zealand Defence Force today.
Lieutenant Alfred “Bunty” Preece QSO did his duty unwaveringly,never asking for anything other than that which would make life better for others. We would do well to emulate his example.
As a Minister it’s not often I quote from the media. But I believe words used by Mike Crean from Fairfax are very apt at a time like this. Mike interviewed Bunty at the Māori Battalion’s last reunion in December 2012. Of him he said:“He marched with 28 (Māori) Battalion of the NZ Army 2nd  Division, right through Italy, in 1944 and 1945. He marched through fire, through woundings, through the loss of comrades.
“He marched through the stench of dead soldiers left lying in the open because enemy snipers were watching. Now he marches through memories.
“Pride in his battalion surges through a body bent by years of rain-laden winds that storm off southern seas to enshroud his islands.
“His head bows as he explains how immediate his memories of those traumatic days in battle are. His sheet of white hair flops over closed eyes. Again the poet in him speaks – ‘The most gentle became savage, and the savage would weep’. These were the two extremes. These were what the Māori Battalion was all about.”
I want to take a moment to share two observations of the men of the 28th Māori Battalion from two men you may never know nor meet. . Just last night I pulled out the memoirs of a foster uncle, Sergeant Lou Thorburn, who served in World War 2 with Queen Alexandra’s Mounted Riflesand then with the 26th Battalion. As a Māori child growing up with numerous foster families, I didn’t have much contact with my Māori whanaunga. Uncle Lou was one who would spend time with me when he and Aunty Eva visited. One moment I have never forgotten is of this man, who fought in Egypt, Libya and Italy to the end of the war and who never talked about the war. One day whilst sitting beside me on the porch he said “you know Ronnie, if you had seen what I have seen the Māori soldiers of the 28th Battalion do, you would forever be proud that you are a Māori, never forget that.”
And then this morning on my way to the airport my driver overheard me talking to one of my staff about today’s events and Bunty. When I finished my call he said:  “Minister, I’m very sorry to hear of the loss of another soldier from the Māori Battalion. My dad served in the 21st Battalion and he always said ‘if you were going into battle you always wanted the Māori beside you or behind you because they were fearless and they looked after everyone’.”
Bunty epitomised those men, who chiselled that reputation in the minds of their fellow soldiers.
Bunty, you led your men well. You were a credit to your whanau, your battalion, your island, your tribe, your country. You stood up for the side of good, in the most harrowing time the world has seen.
Be with your tipuna, be at peace with your old comrades.
We will remember you.

Jury still out on value of PGF initiatives, says BERL

Source: MakeLemonade.nz

Headline: Jury still out on value of PGF initiatives, says BERL

Wellington – The Provincial Growth Fund (PGF) has the potential to be a lifeline for struggling provinces and regions. “But last week’s announcement of initial projects was disappointingly light”, according to BERL deputy chief economist Hillmaré Schulze. The recently announced $3 billion Provincial Growth Fund is the largest injection of central government funding into provincial New…

The post Jury still out on value of PGF initiatives, says BERL appeared first on Make Lemonade NZ.