APABIS Vanuatu conference 2007 -- Keynote Speakers
Waikato Management School
The University of
Waikato
Hamilton
New Zealand
Keynote speakers at the APABIS Vanuatu conference 25-27 June 2007
* Prof
Michael Stohl, Department of Communication, University of
California, Santa Barbara
* John Perrottet, Tourism
Sector Program, Private Enterprise Partnership -
Pacific
* Prof Tamati Reedy, Pro Vice-Chancellor (Maori),
University of Waikato, New Zealand
* Ash Puriri, Maori
business consultant and entertainer
* Dr Eci K.
Nabalarua, Pro Vice-Chancellor, Academic, University of the
South Pacific
* Prof James McMaster, Director, MBA
Programme, Graduate School of Business, University of the
South Pacific
Papers being presented
Stakeholder Engagement:
James
Barker/ Richard Varey
"Frameworks for creating
sustainable biotechnology-related dialogue and
decision-making communication"
Albert Mellam
"Social
capital networks between mining stakeholders in Papua New
Guinea"
Louise Lee,
"Business community partnerships -
understanding the nature of 'partnership'"
Sustainable
Business & Environmental Management
Brennan Allen
"Thoughts on the role of self-regulation in achieving
sustainability"
Eva Collins
"Environmental practice
bundles"
Richard Varey,
"Sustainability enactment and
purposeful expansion in hybrid car marketing
systems"
Entrepreneurship
Vikram
Murthy
"Strategising community sustainability: Grafting
for-profits management frameworks to society"
Ravinder
Rena
"Women's employment in Eritrea: Reflections from
pre- and post-independence period"
Gayle
Jennings
"Business ethics and responsible practice: A
professional-based learning approach in tertiary
education"
Economic Sustainability
Moazzem
Hossain
"Bangladesh's poverty reduction strategy paper
and the prospects for decentralisation and sustainable rural
development"
Helen Samujh
"Building sustainable
communities through supporting micro-business"
Bill
Neace
"A holistic schema for greening the supply
chain"
Social and Workplace Wellbeing
Robin
Hill
"Workplace wellbeing in the farming
community'
Maree Roche
"Maungatautari Mountain
ecological island reserve and surrounding farmer
wellbeing"
Patricia Grant
"The pursuit of virtue and
workplace wellbeing"
Tourism
Anne Niatu
"Making a
living from tourism: market vendors' experience of cruise
ship visitation"
Filipo Tokelau
"I like it and I think
I can pay for it too: An application of backpackers"
James
McMaster
"Impact of internet and website marketing on
backpacker accommodation in Fiji, Tonga and
Samoa"
Globalisation and Local Communities
Anne
Zahra
"Subsidiarity: Implications for governance,
globalisation and local communities"
Shiv Ganesh
"'Our
time is now': An assessment of optimism in contemporary
India"
Jarrod Haar
"Employee wellbeing among Tanzanian
civil servants"
About Waikato Management School:
The University of Waikato Management School is ranked the number one research-led business school in New Zealand, combining academic excellence and the practical application of theory in its teaching and research programmes. The School is highly regarded for its distinctive focus on sustainability in achieving wealth and well-being.
Based in Hamilton, New Zealand's fourth-largest city, Waikato Management School has been recognised as one of the world's best business schools through accreditation by all three of the world's leading quality assurance bodies in management and business education -- AACSB International, AMBA and EQUIS. Less than 1% of business schools globally have earned this "triple crown" distinction of excellence.
The School has 3,300 students from more than 40 countries, more than 100 faculty members, and offers qualifications at undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral level, with a vibrant and comparatively large PhD programme.
ENDS