Tue 27 Jul 2021 AT 17:15 pm , Wellington

IPANZ Annual General Meeting

IPANZ AGM

Notice is hereby given of the 85th Annual General Meeting of the Institute of Public Administration New Zealand (IPANZ).

Life members, fellows, members and friends are invited to attend the Annual General Meeting on Tuesday, 27 July 2021.

Nominations:

IPANZ is seeking nominations to join the IPANZ Board. IPANZ is looking for candidates with the following competencies: governance experience, ability to think strategically, passion for IPANZ's vision, and demonstrated thought leadership. We are particularly seeking nominations from people with knowledge and connections to Te Ao Maori and people living in Auckland.

The completed nomination form must be received by the Office Manager at admin@ipanz.org.nz no later than 2pm on Tuesday 20 July 2021.

Programme:

5.15pm - Registration

5.30pm - Institute's Annual General Meeting

6.05pm - Guest Speaker, Professor Arthur Grimes

7.00pm - Networking and light refreshments

7.45pm - Finish

The notice of the IPANZ Annual General Meeting, the Board Nomination form, Minutes of the 2020 AGM and Proposed Amendments to the Constitution are attached:

Notice of IPANZ AGM 2021

IPANZ AGM 2020 - Meeting Minutes

Board Nomination Form 2021

AGM agenda 2021 - Constitution Amendments for Adoption

IPANZ Constitution Changes - AGM 27 July 2021

Guest Speaker: Professor Arthur Grimes, School of Government, Wellington School of Business and Government, Victoria University of Wellington

Topic of Address:
The Wellbeing Approach - has it lived up to its promise?

Arthur Grimes is a Professor at the School of Government, Wellington School of Business and Government, and inaugural holder of the Chair of Wellbeing and Public Policy. He is also a Senior Fellow at Motu Economic and Public Policy Research in Wellington. He is ideally placed to give IPANZ members an account and critique of the New Zealand approach to improving wellbeing. He will outline applications of wellbeing frameworks in other parts of the world, thereby demonstrating potential enhancements to be considered here. Has the wellbeing approach lived up to its promise? If not, what are the most compelling ways to improve budgeting and policy formulation processes to enhance wellbeing?


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