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The university is governed by a council, chaired by the pro-chancellor.The council consists of the Pro-Chancellor, Vice-Chancellor, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of the South Pacific, a member of the university Senate, staff and student representatives, up to six members appointed by the O le Ao o le Malo, and up to four additional members co-opted by the council. [7]
The SNDP also promised to terminate the education minister's ex officio membership in the National University of Samoa council and to bar all politicians from holding membership. In an effort to appeal to elderly voters, the SNDP announced plans to lower the eligible pension age from 65 to 55.
Tui Ātua served as the third prime minister of Samoa from 1976 to 1982 and again later in 1982. [5] He also served as O le Ao o le Malo (head of state of Samoa) from 2007 to 2017. [6] [2] As of late 2024, he was reappointed to serve on the Council of Deputies.
From 2007 to 2011 he served on the council of the National University of Samoa. [4] Throughout his life he sponsored various sports teams and charities, including the Samoa International Game Fishing Association, Samoa Squash Rackets Association, Little Sisters’ of the Poor, and the Carmelite Sisters’ Monasteries of Samoa, Wallis & Futuna ...
Oceania University of Medicine (OUM) is an Independent Samoa-based medical school established in 2002 and operated through a public-private partnership between the Government of Samoa and e-Medical Education, LLC, a Florida-based medical education management company. Its hybrid curriculum of distance-learning preclinicals and face-to-face ...
Le Mamea was educated at Samoa College [1] and later studied pharmacy at the University of Otago, graduating in 1970 to become Samoa's first pharmacy graduate. [2] He worked as chief pharmacist at Cherry Farm Psychiatric Hospital in Hawksbury, New Zealand . [ 3 ]
Tuifuisaʻa Patila Malua Amosa is a Samoan oceanographer. She is Dean of Sciences at the National University of Samoa. [1]Amosa was educated at Flinders University in Australia and the University of Otago in New Zealand, [2] graduating with an MSc in Environmental Science in 2007 and a PhD in Chemistry in 2015. [3]
Mataʻafa has represented Samoa on the executive board of UNESCO. From 2006 to 2012 she served as Pro-Chancellor and Chairperson of the University of the South Pacific. She is currently president of the Samoa National Council of Women. [17]