Gabrielle Ann Huria (born 1962) is a New Zealand MÃÂori leader working in freshwater management and mental health. In 2018 Huria was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to MÃÂori and governance.
Huria was born in Christchurch in 1962. She is MÃÂori and affiliates to NgÃÂi Tahu. Huria attended Our Lady of the Assumption school in Hoon Hay in Christchurch, and the St Vincent de Paul School (known as the Rigi) and Erskine College in Wellington. She has qualifications in journalism and television production from Waiariki Polytechnic and Christchurch Polytechnic. Huria completed a Bachelor of Arts in sociology at the University of Canterbury.
Huria worked in television as a journalist, researcher and scriptwriter, and then as a producer for television and radio. Huria spent five years as the Auckland-based producer for the children's radio show Ears, where she developed a group of MÃÂori writers to contribute new stories to the programme. She has also published several children's books. Huria worked in public relations, and was public affairs manager for Te Runanga o NgÃÂi Tahu, before becoming chief executive and chair of NgÃÂi Tahu Communications. Huria was responsible for the communications strategy for NgÃÂi Tahu during their treaty negotiations and during the post-settlement period, and created and edited a magazine Te Karaka. Following the 2011 Christchurch earthquakes, Huria established a trust, to rebuild and insulate homes, and to develop infrastructure to allow tribal members to occupy tribal land in Tuahiwi.
Huria has also been a member of the NgÃÂi Tahu Research Centre Advisory Board, and is the NgÃÂi Tahu Mission Leader for Sisters of Mercy New Zealand.
Huria was Deputy Chair of the Canterbury District Health Board, and chief executive of Te Kura Taka Pini, a NgÃÂi Tahu company working in South Island freshwater management. She was a trustee of the MÃÂia Health Foundation, which works in mental health. In 2014 Huria was appointed as the inaugural chair of Emerge Aotearoa, a provider of mental health services for MÃÂori and Pacific people.
In 2021, Huria was appointed a member of the Three Waters Working Group on Representation, Governance and Accountability, to provide a "Treaty partner perspective". Huria was responsible for commissioning an exhibition by photographer Anne Noble, Unutai e! Unutai e!, and also appeared in the exhibition. The exhibition was commissioned as evidence in Ngai Tahu's High Court Freshwater Statement of Claim, a case filed in 2020. The exhibition opened in Dunedin Public Art Gallery from May to October 2025 and then moved to Christchurch Art Gallery, where it is scheduled to run until April 2026.
Canterbury University Press published a collection of Huria's poetry, Pakiaka, in 2025. It has been described as "part family chronicle and part a settling of accounts â a depiction of being NgÃÂi Tahu in a modern world", and "slim but powerful". In September 2025 Huria appeared at the WORD Christchurch literary festival with ecologist Mike Joy, where she read one of her poems and talked about the practice of mahinga kai (traditional food gathering), her memories of childhood eeling, swimming and floundering, and how her work is motivated by the desire that her children and grandchildren should have the same opportunities.
In the 2018 Queen's Birthday Honours, Huria was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to MÃÂori and governance. In 2019 she was a finalist in the Board and management section of the Women of Influence Awards.
Huria's sister is company director Jane Huria.