Joanna Mary Manning | |
---|---|
Nationality | New Zealand |
Alma mater | George Washington University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Medical ethics |
Institutions | University of Auckland |
Joanna Mary Manning is a New Zealand academic, and a full professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Auckland. [1]
After an undergraduate at University of Auckland, Manning did a Masters at George Washington University and worked as a prosecutor before returning to academia at Auckland, rising to full professor. [1]
Manning has held a number of roles relating to medical ethics, including with the Medical Practitioners Disciplinary Committee, National Ethics Advisory Committee and Scientific Advisory Committee of the Heart Foundation NZ. She has also edited a source book on one of New Zealand's biggest medical ethics controversies, the Cartwright Inquiry. [2]
The Ockham New Zealand Book Awards are literary awards presented annually in New Zealand. The awards began in 1996 as the merger of two literary awards events: the New Zealand Book Awards, which ran from 1976 to 1995, and the Goodman Fielder Wattie Book Awards, which ran from 1968 to 1995.
The Cartwright Inquiry was a committee of inquiry held in New Zealand from 1987 to 1988 that was commissioned by the Minister of Health, Michael Bassett, to investigate whether, as alleged in an article in Metro magazine, there had been a failure to treat patients adequately with cervical carcinoma in situ (CIS) at National Women’s Hospital (NWH) by Herbert Green, a specialist obstetrician and gynaecologist and associate professor at the Postgraduate School of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Auckland. The inquiry was headed by District Court Judge Silvia Cartwright, later High Court Justice, Dame and Governor-General of New Zealand. The Report of the Cervical Cancer Inquiry was released on 5 August 1988.
Mai Chen is a New Zealand and Harvard educated lawyer with a professional and specialist focus in constitutional and administrative law, Waitangi tribunal and courts, human rights, white collar fraud and regulatory defence, judicial review, regulatory issues, education law, and public policy and law reform. Chen is the Managing Partner of Chen Palmer Public and Employment Law Specialists, board director of BNZ bank and an adjunct professor at the University of Auckland School of Law. Having served previously in the University's Business School. Chen is also the Chair of New Zealand Asian Leaders, SUPERdiverse WOMEN and the Superdiversity Institute for Law, Policy and Business. She is married to Dr John Sinclair and the two have one son.
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