Nine To Noon for Tuesday 22 March 2011
09:05 What's the legality of the UN Security Council's decision to impose a no-fly zone in Libya, and how does it work as a military concept?
Professor Al Gillespie, University of Waikato's pro-vice chancellor of research, and a Professor of law/international law; and Anita McNaught, Al Jazeera's roving Middle East correspondent.
09:20 Auckland Unleashed - lessons from Sydney
Stephen Loosley, chairman of the Committee for Sydney who will be attending "Auckland Unleashed", a one-day summit being hosted by Auckland mayor Len Brown on Wednesday.
09:45 US correspondent Luiza Savage
10:05 English novelist Joanna Trollope
Best-selling author whose novels include The Rector's Wife, The Choir and Other People's Children. Her 16th contemporary novel Daughters-in-Law has just been released. The 67-year-old distant niece of Victorian novelist Anthony Trollope started out by writing historical novels under the nom-de-plume Caroline Harvey and a study of women in the British Empire, Britannia's Daughters.
Daughters-in-Law, published by Random House
10:25 Book review with Paul Diamond
One Foot in Eden by Ron Rash
Published by Text
10:45 Reading: The Other Side Of Silence by Margaret Mahy (Part 2 of 12)
The adventure of a girl who decides to stop speaking.
11:05 Business and economics commentator Rod Oram
The outburst by many teleco companies against the government's handling of re-regulating the industry and the Ultra Fast Broadband initiative; Bernard Whimp's misleading offers to buy shares in major companies at prices below market value; and more on Pike River.
11:20 Are secondary school students getting adequate careers advice?
Judith Pringle, AUT; Maggie Hames, Careers and Transition Education Association; Karen Vaughn, senior researcher, New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER)
11:45 Media commentator Denis Welch