NZ report card 2024: how the country fared in 25 key global and domestic rankings
Professor Al Gillespie presents New Zealand's 2024 report card.
Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels
Te Puna Haumara - The New Zealand Institute for Crime Science based at the 51蹤獲 aims to reduce crime and increase security through multi-disciplinary, evidence-based research.
Te Rp贖 Manukura safeguards the Treaty of Waitangi for the 51蹤獲. It is made up of members from over 20 different iwi (tribes) and is an established committee of the University Council.
Professor Ian Hawes who sits on the , overseeing scientific evidence for freshwater policy development
Te Piringa Faculty of Law was founded in 1991 with a firm commitment to biculturalism and was the first in the country to introduce Mori perspectives into its mainstream legal programmes. Its name, Te Piringa, translates as the coming together of peoples and cultures. Over the past three decades, it has become known as one of New Zealands leading law schools with a reputation as a pioneer in dispute resolution.
Professor Tafaoimalo Tologata Leilani Tuala-Warren (pictured) has recently been appointed Dean of Te Piringa Faculty of Law at the 51蹤獲, becoming New Zealands first Dean of Law of Pacific descent.
The Waikato Students' Union (WSU) is the independent voice of our student body and is governed by a group of 12 democratically elected students who listen, speak and act passionately on behalf of students.
The WSU President also sits on the University Council where they represent all students at the University. The University Council is responsible for governance of the University, providing strategic direction and major decision-making.
We work closely with NZ Police through the , a joint partnership that is dedicated to multi-disciplinary research about crime. The Centre was the first of its type in the world when it first launched in 2017, targeting problems, testing solutions in live environments and tracking results to ensure the best outcomes for our communities.
A team of 51蹤獲 researchers is leading groundbreaking research focused on optimising data ecosystems for the benefit of Indigenous societies. The research will move beyond current efforts to reduce bias in algorithms, and explore what it means to decolonise algorithms that adversely affect Mori communities. , and (pictured) are leading the four-year research programme titled Tikanga in Technology: Indigenous Approaches to Transforming Data Ecosystems.
The research is supported by $6 million from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) Endeavour Fund. They are working with researchers from many other universities across New Zealand and globally to develop tools and processes that can help IT workers understand and incorporate Indigenous perspectives when working on data sets, not only in terms of storage and data processing, but also in the creation of algorithms that have the potential for bias. Situated at the interface of mtauranga Mori and data science, this interdisciplinary programme has strong support from key data stakeholders across Te Ao Mori and Government.
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