1Professor Bradford Morse talks about how the new foreshore and seabed legislation will work in practice if iwi claim customary titles. Professor Morse has served as legal advisor to many First Nations as well as national and regional Aboriginal organizations since 1974 in a range of constitutional, land claim, governance, economic and treaty issues.
2Fiona Godlee is the Editor in Chief of the British Medical Journal, which has challenged the World Health Organisation over its handling of the swine flu pandemic and not declaring the ties between its advisors and the major pharmaceutical companies profiting off the H1N1 pandemic.
3News from the United States, including: South Carolina's Gubernatorial primaries were particularly bizarre with seemingly all candidates accused of crimes or unethical behaviour.
4Feature guest: David Coltart is Zimbabwe's minister of Education and Sport in the Global Political Agreement; and founding member of the Movement for Democratic Change. He is in New Zealand to meet the Foreign Affairs minister and to lobby NZ Cricket to get the Black Caps to tour Zimbabwe.
5Book Review: Maraea Rakuraku reviews 'Tuamaka: The Challenge of Difference in Aotearoa New Zealand' by Dame Joan Metge, foreword by Justice Eddie Durie. Published by Auckland University Press.
6Business and Economic commentator Rod Oram discusses a recently released government study which documents poor business management in New Zealand and allows comparison with 16 other countries analysed using the same methodology.
7Robyn Horsfall is a leaky homeowner who is trying to do something positive with her situation. She has written a book, 'Life Lessons from a Leaky Building: Strategies for Personal Resilience', to help support and inspire other leaky home owners to get through the emotional roller coaster they face. The proceeds of the e-book will help existing leaky home owners in New Zealand.
8Media with Denis Welch, including: Sean Plunket resigns from Morning Report; The Independent closes; a round up of the Qantas media awards for print journalism.