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2023 National Volunteering Conference
Program
Volunteering Australia was delighted to present the 2023 National Volunteering Conference Program.
The conference theme, The Future is Now, challenged delegates to explore how our decisions and actions today will build a better future for volunteering.
The program was designed to include practical, strategic and research-focused sessions with multiple streams of breakout sessions to choose from.
The Conference plenaries and breakout sessions were recorded. Simply scroll down and click on a session to reveal the video recording, presenter information and presentation slides, where available.
DAY ONE
Breakout Session 1
A. EVIDENCE & PRACTICE
A1 & A2: Informal Volunteering Symposium – Interactive Workshop
This symposium will unpack diverse understandings and meanings of informal volunteering and explore its implications for the volunteering sector and public policy more broadly. It will bring together people interested in understanding more about this critical space and identify practical strategies to better support informal volunteers. Key findings from a review of the informal volunteering literature will be presented, and feed into a series of interactive discussion sessions.
Presenters/Facilitators: Carolyn Hendriks, Elise Klein, Heba Al Adawy and Peter Davis
Please note: The MOVE (mobilising volunteers effectively) Project presentation is not included in the recording. However, the presentation slides are available below.
A1 & A2: Presenters
Carolyn M. Hendriks
Professor at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Carolyn M. Hendriks is a Professor at the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University. She is an educator and social researcher with expertise in democratic aspects of contemporary governance, including public participation, community organising, deliberation, inclusion, listening and representation. Carolyn’s current research is exploring how citizens themselves are leading informal collective problem-solving efforts to address governance voids or to repair dysfunctional institutions. Carolyn is the author of three books, including Mending Democracy (with Ercan & Boswell, Oxford University Press, 2020), The Politics of Public Deliberation (Palgrave, 2011), Environmental Decision Making: exploring complexity and context (with Harding & Faruqi, Federation Press 2009).
Elise Klein OAM
Associate Professor at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Elise Klein (OAM) is an Associate Professor of Public Policy at the Crawford School, Australian National University. Her research focuses on development policy with a specific interest in work, redistribution, decoloniality and care.
Heba Al Adawy
Policy Officer, Volunteering Australia
Heba is a Policy Officer at Volunteering Australia. She is also a PhD candidate at the Coral Bell School of Asia & the Pacific at Australian National University. Her previous degrees are from Mount Holyoke College (USA) and the University of Oxford (UK) respectively. Her research and policy portfolio at Volunteering Australia includes: volunteering in the aged care sector; informal volunteering within culturally and linguistically diverse communities, and indigenous forms of volunteering in Australia.
Peter Davis
Founder, Bloodbikes Australia
Born in Brisbane Australia 1958, spent 40 years as a cartographer, then 5 years as a bus driver. Being an avid motorcyclist I was inspired by the Bloodbikes movement in the UK to start a similar volunteer service in Australia. In September 2019 started Bloodbikes Australia, in Brisbane with Mater Pathology offering a free last resort medical transport service. Bloodbikes Australia now has 279 fully qualified volunteers, in all states and territories, offering a free volunteer last resort medical transport service to more than 50 healthcare providers. Bloodbikes Australia is not a charity but a group of individual volunteers agreeing to a set of rules, attaining the same national certification and looking after all their own expenses.
Professor Joanne Cook
Professor in Organisational Behaviour and HRM, University of Hull
Joe is Chair in Organizational Behaviour and Stakeholder Dialogue at the University of Hull. Her research interests include cross sectoral dialogue/collaboration between public, private and third sectors, preventative approaches in adult social care and participatory action research methods. Her more recent projects focus upon local authority-voluntary community sector collaboration, prevention in adult social care and poverty, and community engagement. With current projects commissioned by the ESRC, NIHR and the Office for Civil Society.
Dr Harriet Thiery
Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Hull
Dr Harriet Thiery is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of Hull’s Business School. Her research interests include community-led action, the relationships between local government & civil society, and place-based & strengths-based approaches to public service delivery.
B. INCLUSION, DIVERSITY & INTERSECTIONALITY
B1: Harnessing the power of lived experience
This session will explore how lived experience is informing volunteering policy and practice. It will include presentations on how people with disability are contributing through volunteering and on how working with neurodiverse volunteers requires different expectations and can lead to unexpected positive outcomes.
Presenters: Fiona Woods, Beth Garwood and Felix Perigrie
Facilitator: Becc Spradau, VolunteeringACT
B1: Presenters
Fiona Woods
President, Blind Citizens Australia
I became the President of Blind Citizens Australia in December 2021, having become a director in 2017. All directors are volunteers who are blind or vision impaired. I have been totally blind since early childhood. I studied Law and Arts and the University of Melbourne and worked as a solicitor and public servant, before choosing to become the stay-at-home parent of my six children. I have held many volunteer roles with BCA and have also volunteered as a Breastfeeding Counsellor with the Australian Breastfeeding Association. I have recently been elected as a volunteer director with Vision 2020 Australia.
Beth Garwood
Volunteer Engagement and Development Manager, Mental Illness Education ACT
I am a huge advocate for (safely) harnessing the power of lived experience. After a number of years policing in the Northern Territory, I burned-out in 2018 and was diagnosed with PTSD and Bipolar Disorder. I joined MIEACT in 2021 to share my story with the aim of reducing stigma associated with mental illness, empower others to better manage their own mental health and send a powerful message of hope; learning to manage my experience of bipolar has enabled me to live an authentic and far happier, healthier and more fulfilling life than I could have ever dreamed possible, and for this I am incredibly grateful.
Felix Perigrie
Volunteer Engagement Lead & Centre Supervisor, Lifeline Melbourne
Felix is a lifelong volunteer with a particular focus in mental health. They started volunteering while studying and never really stopped, and now they’re thrilled to be using that experience at Lifeline Melbourne, engaging telephone crisis supporters to make their experience the best it can be. Felix was diagnosed with ADHD by friends (and some strangers) for a decade before they got a professional opinion, and has seen first hand how they and other neurodivergent people can flourish when given the right support.
C. LEADERSHIP & INNOVATION
C1: Innovations in volunteer engagement
This panel discussion will involve some of the nation’s great volunteer engagement innovators. Hear a diverse range of experienced volunteer leaders on how they have navigated the challenges of recent times and how they have adapted their practices.
Presenters: DJ Cronin, Tracey O’Neill CVA, Leesa Riley and Kylie Elliott
Facilitator: Megan Paull, Murdoch University
C1: Presenters
DJ Cronin
Volunteer Experience Manager, Uniting Care Queensland
Irish-born, Diarmuid Joseph Cronin, and known as DJ in Australia, Diarmuid commenced volunteering for organisations at the age of 15 and has been active in volunteering for most of his life. DJ believes that volunteerism is a powerful movement for betterment and change in our society.
DJ has lead volunteers in various settings in Australia for the past 25 years and has developed a special interest in volunteer leadership, mindful leadership, authentic leadership and presence. DJ writes on Volunteer Leadership, Leadership in general and Volunteerism and has written for Energize, an international peer-reviewed journal on Volunteerism, Pro Bono News in Australia, OZVPM, IVO, the National Magazine for Volunteering England the ABC and Volunteering Auckland.
DJ has twice been a Faculty member with the Australasian Retreat for Advanced Volunteer Management and his work with volunteers has been recognised by innovation awards from the Private Hospital Association Queensland and the Australian Private Hospital Association. DJ had delivered presentations for various groups across Australia and is a current member of the International Association of Volunteer Effort, The United Nations Association in Australia and sat on the Volunteer Management Working Group and the Strategy Core Design Team assisting Volunteering Australia with the new National Strategy for Volunteering.
DJ is trained in “Dare to Lead’ which equips him with the skills, practices, and tools that underpin the four skill sets of courage: Rumbling with Vulnerability, Living into Our Values, Braving Trust, and Learning to Rise. DJ believes that more people will volunteer, formally and informally who will not only change our planet but will leave a better planet for children and theirs. He believes that this will only be achieved by ensuring inclusion where any person can give their time, in any way, by any means. A poet, writer, actor and lover of connection, DJ lives with his family as guests in Cullen Cullen on Quandamooka land.
Tracey O’Neill CVA
Senior Manager Volunteer Engagement, Brotherhood of St Laurence
Tracey O’Neill, CVA, has been a volunteer since she was 10 and involved in volunteer engagement since 2001. She is currently the Senior Manager of Volunteer Engagement the Brotherhood of St. Laurence, a social justice organisation that works to prevent and alleviate poverty across Australia. Tracey was a member of the Victorian Volunteer Strategy Taskforce and the National Volunteering Strategy Volunteer Management Working Group.
Tracey is an advocate for transformative and sustainable volunteer management and developing advanced leadership training opportunities to develop and retain exceptional members of the sector. She is passionate about the elevation of the profession of volunteer engagement and encourages leaders of volunteers to actively participate in enhancing the visibility, respect, and leadership skills of those in the profession. Tracey would like to see volunteer management become a chosen career path and to see the role occupy senior leadership positions within organisations.
Tracey is proud to be Certified in Volunteer Administration (CVA) and a 2020 Association of Leaders in Volunteer Engagement Exemplary Leader award recipient. She is the founder of the Volunteer Engagement Professionals – Connections & Camaraderie Facebook group, connecting colleagues across the globe. In 2019, she became co-editor of Voices for Engage.
Leesa Riley
Statewide Volunteering Manager, Parks Victoria
Leesa has eighteen years’ experience in professional volunteer management. Leesa is currently the Statewide Volunteering Manager at Parks Victoria responsible for the Volunteering in Parks Strategic Plan 2017 – 2021, award-winning volunteer management system, ParkConnect, and delivers industry first programs including the Volunteering Innovation Fund. Previously Leesa pioneered a role between Conservation Volunteers Australia and Parks Victoria building understanding between diverse sectors and developing exemplary volunteer partner models. Leesa spent 11 years at Conservation Volunteers Australia developing volunteer programs in Australia and internationally. Leesa is passionate about developing the profession of Volunteer Management and gained her Certification in Volunteer Administration (CVA) in 2021 and is a Professional Leader of Volunteers (PLV) since 2019.
Kylie Elliot
Volunteer and Supporter Engagement Lead, Sydney Children’s Hospitals Foundation
Kylie is a dedicated volunteer for more than 30 years; she turned her passion into a career 12 years ago. Responsible for setting up and growing the innovative Volunteer Program at Sydney Children’s Hospitals Foundation, Kylie has also been involved in creating SCHF’s Volunteer Policy and Procedures, ensuring they’re aligned to the National Standards for Volunteer Involvement and the first organisation in NSW to fully implement the standards. Kylie was the recipient of the 2020 NSW Excellence in Volunteer Management award. Chosen as a member of the 2022 National Strategy for Volunteering; Volunteer Managers Working Group and 2022 NSW Volunteer Taskforce.
C1: Presentation Slides
D. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE LIFECYCLE
D1: Child safe volunteering
In this interactive workshop, the National Office for Child Safety will lead a discussion on National Principles for Child Safety and Working with Children Checks.
Presenters: Toni Hunt and Julie Hourigan Ruse
Facilitator: Julie Hourigan Ruse, SHINE for Kids
D1: Presenters
Toni Hunt
Director, Safer Organisations and Culture Section, National Office for Child Safety
Toni Hunt is the Director of the Safer Organisations and Culture Section within the National Office for Child Safety where she leads a team to deliver and promote measures aimed at promoting children’s wellbeing and protecting children from harm. She has worked on child safety policy within the Commonwealth and ACT government for over 10 years. Prior to this she worked in the community sector. Her professional experience has in large part focused on communities with increased vulnerabilities, including work on children’s policy, international child and adult safeguarding policy, justice and corrective service’s policy, and tenancy law and advocacy.
Julie Hourigan Ruse
Chief Executive Officer, SHINE for Kids
Julie is the Chief Executive Officer of SHINE for Kids. She is a results focused leader achieving better outcomes for children, young people, families and communities experiencing vulnerability.
Julie has significant experience in the community sector predominantly in the areas of early intervention and prevention; domestic violence; and homelessness. She was previously the Chief Executive Officer at NSW Family Services Inc (Fams). Julie is a professionally certified Results Based AccountabilityTM practitioner, and wishes she had access to the framework principles a decade earlier than she did.
Julie has also worked in community legal centres, government legal roles and corporate accounting firms.
She maintains her legal practising certificate and has a Masters in Law (Human Rights and Social Justice). She has been an NSW Government appointed member of the Housing Appeals Committee since 2010 and a Presiding Chair since July 2013.
D1: Presentation Slides
E. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE NATION
E1: Innovations across the nation
This session showcases the diverse range of volunteer programs from across the nation, including a successful ‘travelling volunteers’ program, the Salvos Stores volunteering and circular economy initiative, the innovation at the heart of a Family Drug and Gambling Help volunteer program, and a new volunteer program that has built community through a much-loved heritage railway.
Presenters: Lori Modde, Peter Abbott, Robert Campbell and Jane McIntosh
Facilitator: Zac Reimers, Volunteering Queensland
E1: Presenters
Lori Modde
Managing Director, Visitor Economy Development
Lori is currently the Managing Director of Lorick Management Pty Ltd, the parent company of Visitor Economy Development and currently contracted to be the CEO of Outdoors NSW & ACT. She also holds 6 volunteer board roles and volunteers in mentoring and supporting award programs through judging. She has worked in community and economic development for close to 30 years and sees her role in the world to amplify and empower the maestros in their area of expertise so that they continue to make a difference in the world. Previously Lori has held roles in commercial, local government, state government and not for profit entities including senior management roles in Tourism NSW (now known as Destination NSW), Hills Shire Council, Sydney Olympic Park Authority and various regional tourism organisations.
Peter Abbott
Chief Executive Officer, Emerald Tourist Railway Board – Puffing Billy Railway
Peter is CEO of the iconic Victorian heritage attraction, Puffing Billy Railway. Reporting to the Emerald Tourist Railway Board he manages the organisation that includes volunteers and staff that operate this much-loved part of the Dandenong’s. Now living in Emerald (and hearing the Puffing Bill locomotives passing-by), and having worked in the tourism, heritage and events industry, he has extensive experience in volunteer/staff-based organisations in the Not for Profit Sector – many of which he has led to a range of local, state and national awards. With a focus on building the value of workforce programs that link to the organisations goals of preserving and celebrating the Puffing Billy Railways links to the Dandenong’s community, the organisation is rebuilding after a number of changes since 2018.
Robert Campbell
Program Manager, Self Help Addiction Resource Centre
Rob has been working in the human services field for over twenty-five years across a number of fields including alcohol and other drugs, gambling, men’s behaviour change and family violence, couple and family work, community health, acquired brain injury, and acute and ambulatory services. He is currently the Programme Manager of Family Drug and Gambling Help, a programme of Self Help Addiction Resource Centre (SHARC), that is underpinned by a strong volunteer core of family members with lived and living experience of the impact impact of a loved one’s substance use and/or gambling. His qualifications include a Bachelor of Arts, Master of Social Work in Management and Human Services, Master of Counselling, Graduate Certificate in Family Therapy, Certificate IV in Alcohol and Other Drugs and Certificate IV in Work Place Training. He has also been involved in research projects with Beyond Blue, Deakin University, ARBIAS and Monash University.
Jane McIntosh
Executive Manager, People Team, Salvos Stores
Jane is an accomplished workforce strategist with extensive experience in designing innovative, uncomplicated solutions for growth. She has a successful record of generating a future focused and influencing change to maximise individual, group and organisational potential. In addition to running her own consulting practice, Jane has held executive roles at ANZ, NAB, Deloitte, Clayton Utz Lawyers and Beyond Blue. Jane is currently the Executive Manager of People at Salvos Stores, growing an already 10,000 strong workforce, including over 7,000 volunteers across 360+ stores.
E1: Presentation Slides
Breakout Session 2
A. EVIDENCE & PRACTICE
A1 & A2: Informal Volunteering Symposium – Interactive Workshop
This symposium will unpack diverse understandings and meanings of informal volunteering and explore its implications for the volunteering sector and public policy more broadly. It will bring together people interested in understanding more about this critical space and identify practical strategies to better support informal volunteers. Key findings from a review of the informal volunteering literature will be presented, and feed into a series of interactive discussion sessions.
Presenters/Facilitators: Carolyn Hendriks, Elise Klein, Heba Al Adawy and Peter Davis
Please note: The MOVE (mobilising volunteers effectively) Project presentation is not included in the recording. However, the presentation slides are available below.
A1 & A2: Presenters
Carolyn M. Hendriks
Professor at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Carolyn M. Hendriks is a Professor at the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University. She is an educator and social researcher with expertise in democratic aspects of contemporary governance, including public participation, community organising, deliberation, inclusion, listening and representation. Carolyn’s current research is exploring how citizens themselves are leading informal collective problem-solving efforts to address governance voids or to repair dysfunctional institutions. Carolyn is the author of three books, including Mending Democracy (with Ercan & Boswell, Oxford University Press, 2020), The Politics of Public Deliberation (Palgrave, 2011), Environmental Decision Making: exploring complexity and context (with Harding & Faruqi, Federation Press 2009).
Elise Klein OAM
Associate Professor at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Elise Klein (OAM) is an Associate Professor of Public Policy at the Crawford School, Australian National University. Her research focuses on development policy with a specific interest in work, redistribution, decoloniality and care.
Heba Al Adawy
Policy Officer, Volunteering Australia
Heba is a Policy Officer at Volunteering Australia. She is also a PhD candidate at the Coral Bell School of Asia & the Pacific at Australian National University. Her previous degrees are from Mount Holyoke College (USA) and the University of Oxford (UK) respectively. Her research and policy portfolio at Volunteering Australia includes: volunteering in the aged care sector; informal volunteering within culturally and linguistically diverse communities, and indigenous forms of volunteering in Australia.
Peter Davis
Founder, Bloodbikes Australia
Born in Brisbane Australia 1958, spent 40 years as a cartographer, then 5 years as a bus driver. Being an avid motorcyclist I was inspired by the Bloodbikes movement in the UK to start a similar volunteer service in Australia. In September 2019 started Bloodbikes Australia, in Brisbane with Mater Pathology offering a free last resort medical transport service. Bloodbikes Australia now has 279 fully qualified volunteers, in all states and territories, offering a free volunteer last resort medical transport service to more than 50 healthcare providers. Bloodbikes Australia is not a charity but a group of individual volunteers agreeing to a set of rules, attaining the same national certification and looking after all their own expenses.
B. INCLUSION, DIVERSITY & INTERSECTIONALITY
B2: Focus on LGBTQI+
How to make volunteering welcoming for LGBTQI+ people will be the key focus of this session. Presenters will share their experiences of the importance of LGBTQI+ peer-based and peer-led models and share insights into the nuances and importance of inclusive language and culturally appropriate systems and practice.
Presenters: Sarah Collins and Natalie Jarvis
Facilitator: Jean Giese, VolunteeringACT
B2: Presenters
Sarah Collins
Project Officer and Volunteer Coordinator, Living Proud LGBTIQ+ Community Services
Sarah Collins is a Project Officer and Volunteer Coordinator at Living Proud LGBTIQ+ Community Services and has a volunteer management and training background in aged care, LGBTIQ+, and volunteer resource centres. Her main experience is in medium sized volunteer programs (200-300 volunteers) working across social support, peer support, health promotion/outreach, events, and administration
Sarah has been active in the Australian LGBTIQ+ community for decades as a paid worker, board member and volunteer and has previously served on the Management Committee of PrideWA, the Diversity Reference Group at Rainbow Health Victoria and the Steering Committee of Rainbow Futures WA.
Natalie Jarvis
President, Albany Roller Derby League
Natalie has been volunteering in her community since she was a teenager, she is active in Albany Roller Derby is President, coach, and team captain , committee member with Royals Football Club, Albany Senior High School Chairperson and is active in the Albany Pride Community. Natalie has a strong passion for LGBTQIA representation and making space for voices that are not heard. She is a big believer in doing the work not just talking about doing the work and would love to have a coffee with Brene Brown and Taylor Swift. Natalie lives in Albany at the bottom of WA with her girlfriend Lowanna, three kids and two cats.
B2: Presentation Slides
C. LEADERSHIP & INNOVATION
C2: Innovations in corporate volunteering
This panel discussion will celebrate the progress being made in corporate volunteering practices and ask the hard questions about the role and impact of corporate volunteering as we look to the future.
Presenters: Traci Gamblin, Ash Rosshandler and Liz Mackinlay
Facilitator: Leigh Simmonds, Pfizer & Chair, NSV Corporate Volunteering Working Group
C2: Presenters
Traci Gamblin
Executive Manager Engagement, Volunteering WA
Dedicated to harnessing and promoting the power of volunteering, Traci developed and now oversees Volunteering WA’s leading corporate volunteering program, which connects thousands of corporate employees into organisations that need their support. Traci established Australia’s first Corporate Volunteer Council comprising business leaders in WA committed to advancing corporate volunteering, and works with other volunteering peaks to share knowledge of this growing area. In addition to leading the corporate volunteering program, Traci’s role at Volunteering WA involves sponsorships and partnerships, as well as marketing, communications and events. She is passionate about bringing people and organisations together to tackle some of the community’s most pressing challenges.
Ash Rosshandler
Chief Executive Office, GoodCompany
Ash Rosshandler is the Chief Executive Office of GoodCompany, Australia’s largest unified Workplace Giving, Volunteering, Fundraising and Rewards Platform. Passionate about connecting businesses with charities to bring out the best in everyone, Ash leads a small team to connect over 2000 charities with Australia’s best companies including OPTUS, MEDIBANK, CSL, NBNCO, ANZ and MIRVAC. As a restless Social Entrepreneur Ash has been responsible for launching Australia’s first Charity Gift Card, The Top 40 Best Workplaces to Give Back and GoodCompany Volunteer Mystery Bus. Ash is married and lives in Melbourne with three teenage children and two pets named Loki and Fonzie.
Liz Mackinlay
CEO, Australian Business Volunteers
Liz has 25 years’ experience in the not-for-profit sector, in senior executive experience internationally and Australia. She has held roles with a variety of NFP’s including with World Vision International as Global Vice President of Strategy, with World Vision Australia as Director of Indigenous development, with Australian Doctors International as CEO, International Red Cross Society in Cambodia as a gender specialist as well as serving on several NFP Boards in Australia. Under Liz’s leadership as CEO, Australian Business Volunteers is implementing an innovative approach to community-led disaster across Australia and innovation in SME business recovery in the Pacific.
C2: Presentation Slides
D. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE LIFECYCLE
D2: Youth volunteering
This session will showcase exciting examples of initiatives that have aimed to inspire the new generation of volunteers and will raise and include the voices of youth volunteers.
Presenters: Holly Hazel, Jasmine Sue and Mathew MacDonald & Roxane Foulser-Piggott
Facilitator: Jenna Chia, Volunteering Victoria
D2: Presenters
Holly Hazel
Manager Marketing & Communications, Volunteering WA
Holly is passionate about working for organisations that exist to make lasting change for the communities they operate in. For the past 10-years, Holly has worked within the marketing, communications, media and events space for some of the largest volunteering peak bodies in Australia and Scotland. Holly holds nationally recognised certificates/degrees in commerce, public relations, management, events and journalism through the Australian Institute of Management and Curtin University.
Jasmine Sue
Program Coordinator, Kids Giving Back
As a creative by nature, and professionally nurtured over the years in the community and corporate fields, Jasmine’s journey as Program Coordinator of Kids Giving Back began 3 years ago when she was found volunteering with a charity partner, Thread Together. Homeless and feeling hopeless she became a client of Thread Together and rediscovered her passion and purpose through volunteering. Not only did this reinforce to her the value of giving back, but she also gained a greater understanding of working within the community services sector and the broader spectrum of homelessness and vulnerability.
With a background in horse riding instruction, business solutions, and as a national trainer in the printing industry, Jasmine has brought her diverse range of knowledge and skills with youth, coaching and innovation to Kids Giving Back. Teaching and role modelling the importance of giving back is at the core of her dedication. She sees the significant and direct impact of her work by sharing her lived experience, breaking down stereotypes and stigmas around vulnerability, homelessness and empathy for generations of youth.
Jasmine is deeply connected to her work, and her professional and personal mission is to expand volunteering opportunities to school students, Duke of Edinburgh participants, TAFE and international students, to connect youth volunteers to service opportunities and help young people improve the world we all share together.
Mathew MacDonald
Volunteer Coordinator & Chairperson, Radio Lollipop Gold Coast
Mathew MacDonald is the Volunteer Coordinator and Chairperson of Radio Lollipop Gold Coast, a charity providing care, comfort, play and entertainment to children in hospital. Radio Lollipop gives young patients a voice and a choice during their stay, and Mathew has been responsible for recruiting volunteers across their three QLD stations for the past three years. Mathew also volunteers with non for profit organisation FreddyMatch as an SME on volunteer management best practices, as he is passionate about volunteering.
Roxane Foulser-Piggott
Founder, FreddyMatch
Roxane’s volunteering journey began as a teenager doing gardening work in an aged care home. She continued to volunteer throughout her undergraduate and doctoral studies in engineering, helping STEM education in local schools and designing databases for a charity supporting the families of prisoners. During her career in consulting and finance, Roxane was an independent monitor in a maximum-security prison in the UK. Following the loss of her infant son, Frederick, Roxane dedicated her professional life to volunteering. Developing FreddyMatch, an algorithm-driven website to match volunteers with those in need, Roxane builds supportive communities to expand the reach of volunteering.
E. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE NATION
E2: Focus on environmental volunteering
This session explores the critical role that volunteers play in conservation and addressing environmental challenges. Research and practical strategies for volunteer leaders and co-ordinators active in the environmental sector will be shared.
Presenters: Fiona Tucker, Robyn Gulliver and Katie Ronald
Facilitator: Meredith Blais, Volunteering WA
E2: Speakers
Fiona Tucker
Manager Visitor Programs, Sydney Olympic Park Authority
Fiona Tucker is Manager Visitor Programs for Sydney Olympic Park Authority. She has 25 years professional experience in delivery of natural and cultural heritage visitor programs. Alongside this experience are 25 years volunteering with Girl Guides NSW, ACT & NT, both as District Manager and Kayak/Canoe Skills Instructor.
Fiona’s qualifications include Bachelor of Science, Graduate Diploma of Education and certificates in Assessment and Workplace Training and Graphic Design and Flatwater Kayaking Instruction.
Fiona leads a highly customer focused team as Sydney Olympic Park transforms from being a place to visit to also being a place to live. Using her combined experiences, she is managing the implementation of a new Park Care Program at Sydney Olympic Park. This program provides opportunities for the community to connect and care for place and includes the new Neighbours Nurturing Nature volunteer project.
Dr Robyn Gulliver
Research Fellow, Australian National University and the University of Queensland
Dr Robyn Gulliver is a Research Fellow at Australian National University and the University of Queensland. She is a multi-award winning environmentalist, writer and researcher who has served as an organiser and leader of numerous local and national environmental organisations. Her research focuses on the antecedents and consequences of environmental activism. Her recent publications include The Advocates, Civil Resistance against Climate Change and the Psychology of Effective Activism. She has developed Australia’s largest database of environmental groups and campaigns alongside the ‘Campaign Explorer’ citizen science project, which won the 2020 Australian Council of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences Distinctive Prize.
Katie Ronald
National Volunteer Program Coordinator, Bush Heritage Australia
Katie Ronald has been in volunteer management within the conservation sector for over ten years. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Environmental Management and Conservation Biology and a Certificate IV in Coordination of Volunteer Programs. Like most people, she fell into volunteer management as part of the operations role with her first industry job. Katie now works as the National Volunteer Program Coordinator for Bush Heritage Australia and lives in Perth with her family. Katie’s passion is to match a volunteer to their perfect role, ensuring positive outcomes for the volunteer and the organisation they are volunteering for.
E2: Presentation Slides
Welcome
WELCOME: THE FUTURE IS NOW
Plenary Session 1
LAUNCH OF THE NEW NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR VOLUNTEERING
Plenary session 1 will give an overview of the new National Strategy for Volunteering presented by the National Strategy Director. A panel made up of the Chair of the National Strategy for Volunteering Council and the Chairs of the Research, Volunteer Management, and Corporate Volunteering Working Groups will discuss the ambition of the National Strategy, the journey so far, and what happens next. The conversation will consider where we are now and how we get to where we want to be in 10 years’ time. Throughout the conference, there will be opportunities to dig deeper into the themes and ideas in the National Strategy.
Presenter: Sarah Wilson
Panel: Grainne O’Loughlin, Professor Melanie Oppenheimer, Jessie Harman and Leigh Simmonds
Chair: Mark Pearce, Volunteering Australia
Plenary 1: Speakers
Sarah Wilson
National Strategy Director
Sarah is an alumna of the Australian National University, holding a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws, and is currently completing a Bachelor of Psychological Sciences. Sarah is an avid Los Angeles Lakers Fan, has an unhealthy obsession with her rescue greyhound George, and (travel permitting) spends her free time diving with sharks.
Sarah is an expert in volunteer involvement and volunteer management, formerly serving as Policy Manager for VolunteeringACT for nearly a decade. Throughout her time with VolunteeringACT Sarah played an instrumental role in delivering projects of local and national significance. Sarah is a passionate volunteer, as the President of the Youth Coalition of the ACT, a Telephone Crisis Supporter for Lifeline Canberra, and as a Research and Policy Volunteer for the Coalition for the Protection of Greyhounds.
Grainne O’Loughlin
CEO, Karitane
Chair, NSV Council
Grainne (BSc. Speech Therapy, MBA, GAICD) joined Karitane in 2014 as CEO and has over 30 years’ experience in public health and community services in the UK and Australia. She has held a variety of senior executive roles and has extensive strategic and operational management experience in not for profit healthcare and community settings.
Grainne is an experienced Non- Executive Director holding the following appointments Chair, Australasian Association of Parenting & Child Health Board (AAPCH), Chair, NSW Health Services Association Board (HSA), Chair, National Ability Roundtable, Board Director, Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies
Grainne is a strategic, innovative & driven leader who has a strong focus on collaboration across the health & social services sectors and strives to achieve desired outcomes in early intervention and prevention services for families from vulnerable communities. She is committed to building strong connections across the service system and to enabling thriving, vibrant and supported communities.
Professor Melanie Oppenheimer
Professor Emerita, Australian National University
Chair, NSV Research Working Group
Professor Melanie Oppenheimer is currently based in the School of History at the Australian National University. Previously she was Professor of History at Flinders University (and awarded the title of Professor Emerita) and has held positions in Australian history at the University of Western Sydney and the University of New England. In 2018-19, she was the Visiting Chair in Australian Studies at the University of Tokyo. A Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and appointed to the Australian Research Council’s College of Experts (2016-18), Melanie has recently completed a two-year term as President of the Australian Historical Association.
For over twenty-five years, Melanie has been exploring the role of voluntary organisations, volunteers and voluntary action in times of war and peace, in contemporary and historical contexts, with a special interest in the Australian Red Cross and the global Red Cross Movement. She is the author of multiple books and published widely including The Red Cross Movement, edited with Neville Wylie and James Crossland (2020); Volunteering. Why we can’t survive without it (2008); The Power of Humanity (2014), and All Work. No Pay. Australian Volunteers in War (2002), short-listed for the NSW Premiers’ History Awards. Melanie was a member of the Federal Government’s National Volunteering Strategy Advisory Group (2009-10); involved with the SA Volunteering Strategy (2015-17); and has been delighted to be a member of VA’s National Strategy for Volunteering Council and Chair of the Research Working Group (2022). In October last year, she delivered the JC Bannon Oration, ‘Volunteering for the Ages’ in Adelaide.
Jessie Harman
Non-Executive Director, Rotary International
Chair, NSV Volunteer Management Working Group
Dr Jessie Harman is a Director on the Board of Rotary International – a membership association of 48,000 clubs and 1.4 million members who volunteer their time to deliver positive change in communities around the world. Jessie also serves as a Director of several other volunteer-involving organisations, including as Chair of Ballarat Community Health. Professional Jessie spent almost two decades in tertiary education as a lecturer in marketing and more recently as Pro Vice-Chancellor (International and Partnerships). She is now a professional non-executive director and independent committee chair. She holds an MBA and PhD in social entrepreneurship.
Leigh Simmonds
Manager, External Relations, Pfizer
Chair, NSV Corporate Volunteering Working Group
Leigh is a change maker. Rarely satisfied with the status quo, she is an innovator of programs and systems that inspire and activate collaboration and are set to transform people and populations. She is an advocate for change that leads to equity and better outcomes for all.
Leigh has a clinical background in palliative care and a Masters of Public Health from the University of Western Sydney. Throughout her double-decade career as a health communicator and stakeholder relations manager, Leigh has worked in private and not for profit enterprises including Cancer Council NSW, leading a large team to deliver population cancer control strategies. Leigh is passionate about empowering health consumers to drive the best health outcomes for themselves and those they care for.
In her corporate career, Leigh has held leadership roles in corporate affairs and stakeholder relations. During this time Leigh has held functional roles and led teams in issues management, social responsibility, volunteer program leadership, and impact investing.
In her current role at Pfizer Leigh focuses on engagement with Patient Groups and leads Pfizer’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Program – Pfizer CARES, including Reconciliation Action Plan leadership. She was also the inaugural Chair of the IMPACT2030 Council of Australia.
In her spare-time Leigh enjoys cycling with her blended family and walking her two cavoodles Doogle and Coco.
Plenary Session 2
CHANGING LANDSCAPE, CHANGING CLIMATE, CHANGING ATTITUDES: THE EVOLUTION OF EMERGENCY VOLUNTEERING
Plenary session 2 will address how volunteering needs to respond to climate change and the increasing frequency and severity of emergencies. It will span preparation, response and recovery and will examine areas including the importance of diverse voice, First Nations perspectives, health and wellbeing including the mental health of volunteers, coordination across organisations, targeted action plans, and the future of volunteering.
Presenters: Mark Reilly, Liz Mackinlay and Bradley Creevey
Chair: John Richardson, Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience
Plenary 2: Speakers
Mark Reilly
Manager International Operations, Disaster Relief Australia
Mark has been an integral member of Disaster Relief Australia since its inception in 2016. He has held a range of positions from volunteer to his current role as Manager of International Operations. Before this he served in the Australian Army and then in the New South Wales Fire Service.
Bradley Creevey
Assistant Coordinator General, Operational Capability Branch, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)
Bradley Creevey is Assistant Coordinator General of the Operational Capability Branch, within the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA). As part of the leadership of the Emergency Management and Response Group (EMR) in NEMA, Bradley contributes to the national coordination of disaster response and recovery efforts.
Prior to commencing in NEMA, Bradley undertook extensive service for over 20 years across a range of Home Affairs Portfolio domains, with a focus on law enforcement, humanitarian programs, status resolution programs and information technology.
John Richardson
Manager of Knowledge Development, Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience
John Richardson is the Manager of Knowledge Development for the Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience. He has over 25 years of experience of working in disaster management. This work extends across preparedness, response and recovery in government and NGO settings. He has worked at the individual, local, state, national and international levels. He was the State Recovery Manager for Victoria from 2002 to 2007. He led the development of Red Cross’ unique preparedness program, Rediplan. He has also worked closely with disaster affected individuals and communities.
He is also an Honorary Fellow of the University of Melbourne on the health and wellbeing trajectories of disasters and has published extensively.
John has a background in Geography and Nursing, with a strong interest in the human impacts of disaster, particularly death and bereavement.
Breakout Session 3
A. EVIDENCE & PRACTICE
A3: The Volunteering in Australia research – what’s next?
The Volunteering in Australia (VinA) reports are landmark research which present a full picture of volunteering in Australia from the perspective of volunteers, organisations, and the general population. This session will explore the VinA research and discuss how this amazing publicly-available data can be used by organisations, peaks and governments.
Presenters: Professor Nicholas Biddle & Matthew Gray and Professor Kirsten Holmes, Professor Leonie Lockstone-Binney
Facilitator: Jack McDermott, Volunteering Australia
A3: Presenters
Professor Nicholas Biddle
Associate Director, ANU Centre for Social Research and Methods
Professor Nicholas Biddle is Associate Director of the ANU Centre for Social Research and Methods and head of the methods and survey program in the centre. He has a Bachelor of Economics (Hons.) from the University of Sydney and a Master of Education from Monash University. He also has a PhD in Public Policy from the ANU where he wrote his thesis on the benefits of and participation in education of Indigenous Australians.
Professor Kirsten Holmes
Professor, School of Management and Marketing, Curtin
University
Professor Kirsten Holmes is an internationally-recognised expert in the study of volunteering, particularly in events, leisure, sport and tourism contexts; rural volunteering; non-volunteers; and student volunteering. Kirsten has taught at universities in Australia and the UK, conducted research projects across 15 countries, and published over 80 peer reviewed papers. She is the lead editor of the Routledge Handbook of Volunteering in Events, Sport and Tourism (2021).
Kirsten’s research has been funded by the Australian Research Council, the Australian Government, the UK Government, the International Olympic Committee and she is currently working with Men’s Sheds of WA. Kirsten is Co-Chair of Volunteering Australia’s National Volunteering Research Network, and Chair of Volunteering WA’s research committee.
Professor Leonie Lockstone-Binney
Associate Professor, Griffith University
Professor Leonie Lockstone-Binney is based in the Department of Tourism, Sport and Hotel Management at Griffith University, Australia. Leonie’s research expertise relates to volunteering, contextualised to event and tourism settings. Leonie has published over 95 peer-reviewed articles, many of these in top-tier journals. She has received competitive research funding from the Australian Research Council and the International Olympic Committee and continues to collaborate with leading researchers from Australia, the UK and New Zealand.
Professor Amanda Davies
Associate Professor, Griffith University
Professor Amanda Davies is a social scientist with expertise in demography, population geography and rural and regional development. Her research focuses on examining Australia’s population growth, distribution and patterns of demographic change, particularly in response to economic, social or climatic challenges. Her work also focuses on exploring the social, economic and environmental issues related to rural and regional development, particularly in mining and agricultural communities.
A3: Presentation slides
B. INCLUSION, DIVERSITY & INTERSECTIONALITY
B3: Focus on First Nations
This session will explore volunteering and First Nations people. It will include a presentation from Community First Development which explores how skilled volunteering can support positive change for First Nations’ communities and a presentation of recent research from the ‘Understanding First Nations Community Giving project.’
Presenters: Aimee Bacchetto & Ginibi Robinson and Jenna Chia
Facilitator: Heba Al Adawy, Volunteering Australia
B3: Presenters
Aimee Bacchetto
Volunteer Coordinator, Community First Development
Aimee Bacchetto is one of the Volunteer Coordinators for Community First Development. Aimee has worked with Community First Development since 2019. Aimee enjoys supporting Community First Development volunteers in their role, watching the relationship between volunteer and community grow and seeing the incredible outcomes communities achieve in partnership with each volunteer. Aimee has a Bachelor of Social Work and a Master of Primary Teaching. Aimee has a passion for supporting pathways for authentic and meaningful learning about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, histories, and cultures.
Ginibi Robinson
Community First Development
Ginibi is a Githabul (Bundjalung Nation) woman, grown up on Gadigal (Sydney) and Kaurna (Adelaide) Country. She is a mother of three (two by birth and one through kinship) and lives on Ngarigo Country 65km out of Canberra. Ginibi has a bachelor’s in social work/Social Science (University of SA) and has a passion in creating spaces for deep work, connection and healing. Ginibi moved to Ngunnawal Country (Canberra) in 2001, and has worked in the women’s sector, government and Aboriginal community-controlled sectors since then. Ginibi commenced work at Community First Development in 2022.
Jenna Chia
Senior Engagement and Indigenous Programs Officer, Volunteering Victoria
Jenna Chia is the Senior Engagement and Indigenous Programs Officer at Volunteering Victoria, covering the areas of policy and advocacy, First Nations community engagement and their Reconciliation Action Plan. Jenna first joined Volunteering Victoria in 2018 as Project Officer on the Victoria ALIVE project. She has previously worked on community-based research projects in the areas of student inclusion, family violence and disability inclusion, and as a mental health clinician. Jenna has a Master of Public Health, majoring in Gender and Women’s Health, at the University of Melbourne. She is passionate about inclusion and diversity, gender equality and mental health promotion.
B3: Presentation Slides
C. LEADERSHIP & INNOVATION
C3: Innovating with technology
This session will showcase the exciting range of ways that digital technology is changing how we do and manage volunteering, and how the volunteering experience and community impact is changing as a result.
Presenters: Tina Williams, Bennett Merriman and Marion Allan & Rose Leto-Rerecic and Victor Lee
Facilitator: Tina Williams, Volunteering WA
C3: Presenters
Tina Williams
CEO, Volunteering WA
Tina Williams is CEO at Volunteering WA, Western Australia’s peak body for volunteering, representing over 520,000 volunteers and over 750 member organisations across the state. Tina has proven experience in both the NFP and corporate sectors driving strategies that build strong collaborations and excel performance through people-focused leadership, continuous improvement and learning and development. With a belief there is a volunteer in all of us, Tina feels privileged to be in a position to help communities thrive and inspire people to realise their passions and purpose through volunteering. She is always happy to have chat about the opportunities and challenges in the sector, and how everyone can contribute. Tina holds numerous executive and leadership roles, including Convener of the Minister for Volunteering’s Volunteer Community Reference Group, and Trustee of WA Charity Direct.
Bennett Merriman
Co Founder & CEO of Rosterfy
Bennett Merriman is the Co Founder & CEO of Rosterfy. Bennett is a versatile and hands on business leader with 12 years experience in creating and scaling purpose driven technology and service businesses globally. Focussed, resilient and a determined problem solver, Bennett has overseen all phases of business growth from a three person startup to an international sector leader with Rosterfy, now working with organisations across sports, events, cities and nonprofits in 23 countries globally. With a mission to connect communities to events and causes through volunteering, Bennett has extensive knowledge and experience working alongside some of the biggest volunteer and workforce programs worldwide and is highly regarded as a global leader in workforce engagement and management.
Marion Allan
Team Leader, Virtual Volunteer Team for Program and Scholarship Administration, The Smith Family
With more than 24 years’ experience in Volunteer Management, I am currently Team Leader of the Virtual Volunteer Team for Program and Scholarship Administration at The Smith Family. I lead a team of paid staff and Virtual Volunteers across the country to support organisational growth and the development of a National strategy, ensuring we provide a model of best practice in virtual volunteering. Previous roles include Queensland State Lead for the Growing Careers Project with The Smith Family and coordinating School and Community Programs at UniSC and The University of Newcastle.
Rose Leto-Rerecic
Operations Manager, Volunteering, The Smith Family
Rose Leto-Rerecic’s experience spans 25 years in the Community Services sector, encompassing emergency assistance, women’s health, family support and youth leadership. Her experience extends to various industry specialities including volunteer management, adult education in the VET sector, mentoring and coaching, community development and governance. Over time, Rose has developed skills with focus on strengths-based and relationship building approaches. Within her Operations Manager role, Rose managers a virtual team located across Australia and provides input into managing programs, and projects for all volunteer involving activity at The Smith Family.
Victor Lee
CEO & Co-Founder, Communiteer
Victor is a lifelong volunteer with over 30 years of experience in the sector. He’s been involved in engaging volunteers from within universities, corporates and VIOs, and is a champion for cross-sector collaboration. Vic co-founded Communiteer in 2016, a social enterprise with the mission to connect, engage and mobilise communities to tackle complex social issues. Vic is part of the core working group on the National Volunteering Strategy, a finalist for the Social Entrepreneur of the Year, and a graduate of The Growth Project, Social Leadership Australia and AICD. Most importantly, Vic is a Dad of his 5 year old son, Ethan, and always strives to be the change he wants to see in this world.
C3: Presentation Slides
D. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE LIFECYCLE
D3: Student volunteering
This session will explore volunteering in educational settings – schools, colleges, and universities – and will showcase how programs and institutions are adapting to meet the needs of current young generations.
Confirmed Presenters: Alex Connor, Michelle Gillard and Heidi Unferdorben & Tracey Wallace
Facilitator: Hamilton Calder, Volunteering SA&NT
D3: Presenters
Alex Connor
Social Impact Project Lead, UTS SOUL Award, University of Technology Sydney (UTS)
Alex is an experienced social impact and volunteer engagement professional. Passionate about the sector and leveraging people power to address social challenges, Alex believes we need to change our approach to volunteer engagement to ride the growing wave of people looking for meaning, climate and social change action. Alex holds a graduate certificate in Social Impact from UNSW, is a qualified trainer and facilitator and a previous winner of the NSW Excellence in Volunteer Management Award. Alex currently works at the UTS Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion, leading the SOUL Award leadership and volunteering program.
Michelle Gillard
Program Coordinator – Peer Programs, Western Sydney University
Michelle coordinates two peer led volunteer programs, the MATES Mentoring Program and English Conversation Groups at Western Sydney University. Michelle sees herself as a “forever learner” and started her university journey as a student at the age of 39 after a career change from the banking industry. She is passionate about ensuring the volunteering experience provides valuable training, transferable skills and that recognition should not be a “one size fits all” model.
Heidi Unferdorben
Senior Policy and Project Officer – Volunteers, Department for Education, South Australia
Heidi leads the development of evidence-based resources and training which helps embed student volunteering in the school curriculum and in everyday classroom activity. She has led the establishment of a network of student volunteering champions across South Australia. This network, now incorporated into the work of the Volunteering Strategy for SA is committed to strong partnering with local and state government, the volunteering sector and Business SA. Heidi is chair of the Public Sector Volunteer Policy Network, a panellist for the State Volunteer Awards, a member of the Governors Civics Awards for Schools reference group and past president Rotary Club of Adelaide.
Tracey Wallace
Service Learning Coordinator, Scotch College, Adelaide, South Australia
Having designed and driven Service Learning programs in schools across three continents, Tracey has witnessed first-hand the invaluable contribution volunteering makes to a young person’s holistic education. Working with champion teachers, Tracey mentors schools across the trisector, helping them to develop service learning programs, that support students to authentically become active citizens within their communities. As a Global Schools Advocate, Tracey works to empower educators and students to contribute to tackling the Sustainable Development Goals through Service. Tracey acknowledges the unique position we are in as educators, to empower the youth to be change-makers – locally and globally.
E. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE NATION
E3: Focus on emergency volunteering
This session will explore the challenges facing the emergency management sector, and how contemporary approaches reflect the need to connect with, learn from, and empower local communities. Research on the power of social media platforms during emergency response and recovery will also be profiled.
Presenters: Sumayyah Ahmad and Dr Faye Bendrups OAM
Facilitator: Mara Basanovic, Volunteering Queensland
E3: Presenters
Sumayyah Ahmad
PhD Candidate, Curtin University
Sumayyah Ahmad is a PhD candidate at Curtin University investigating how spontaneous Volunteers use social media before, during and after a disaster. She completed her Master’s in Business Administration with distinction and has been part of many non-profit volunteering organisations and projects for the empowerment of women. She is an instructor at Curtin School of Management and Marketing and a casual academic at UWA. Sumayyah has researched the role of micro-finance to alleviate poverty and has a keen interest in female leadership and mentorship. She is a firm believer in psychological empowerment of women. As a mother who witnessed the devastating earthquake in 2005 in Pakistan, she started thinking about sustainable disaster management and how social media can facilitate that. She has presented at Voluntary Sector and Volunteering Research Conference UK, International Society for Third Sector Research Conference, Volunteering WA Conference, National Volunteering Conference and Centre for Muslim States and Societies, UWA, ICAN Perth, WAAMH and Volunteering WA in Perth.
Dr Faye Bendrups OAM
Vice Chair, National SES Volunteers Association
Faye Bendrups is a frontline volunteer responder with VICSES. She has been deployed to major flood and fire incidents in roles such as Crew Leader, Safety Officer, Staging Area Manager or Base Camp Manager. She is a past recipient of the Victorian Premier’s Volunteer Champions Award for Leadership, and an Emergency Services Foundation (ESF) grant for research into earthquake and tsunami response at the National Institute for Civil Defence in Peru. Dr Bendrups serves on numerous EM reference groups at local, state and national levels including with EMV and AFAC, is President of the Victoria SES Volunteers Association and Vice-Chair of the National SES Volunteers Association.
E3: Presentation Slides
Plenary Session 3
REIMAGINING VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE ECOSYSTEM: LEARNING FROM, AND COLLABORATING WITH, EACH OTHER
Plenary session 3 will explore the breadth and diversity of volunteering and hear from different elements of the volunteering ecosystem. The discussion will focus on opportunities for, and examples of, cross-sector learning and collaboration. It will include a panel discussion with representatives from sport, care and support, emergency relief and informal volunteering. The conversation will build on the launch of the new National Strategy for Volunteering with panelists considering how their organisations and sectors can align with and support the implementation of the National Strategy.
Keynote Speaker: The Hon Amanda Rishworth MP, Minister for Social Services
Panel: Cameron French, Camilla Rowland, Brianna Casey and Mohammad Al-Khafaji
Chair: Mark Pearce, Volunteering Australia
Plenary 3: Speakers
The Hon Amanda Rishworth MP
Minister for Social Services
Amanda Rishworth was elected to the federal parliament as the Member for Kingston in Adelaide’s southern suburbs at the age of 29.
Prior to becoming Minister for Social Services, she served as a parliamentary secretary in the Gillard government in the areas of disabilities, carers, environment and water. In opposition Amanda served as an assistant minister in the education portfolio, Shadow Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Defence Personnel, Shadow Minister for Early Childhood Education and Youth.
Raised in Adelaide, Amanda attended local state schools before graduating with a Bachelor of Psychology Honours from Flinders University and a Masters Degree in Psychology from Adelaide University.
Before entering politics, she practised as a psychologist working with General Practitioners in the delivery of mental health care to the community and served as the Federal President of Young Labor.
Her diverse portfolio encompasses women’s safety, social security, delivering on an early years’ strategy, providing support for pensioners, improving the lives of Australians living with disability, abolishing the cashless debit card and tackling problem online wagering.
Amanda is passionate about improving the lives of the most disadvantaged Australians to make sure that no one is left behind and no one is held back.
*Photo by – Ben Searcy 2018.
Cameron French
Deputy General Manager of Participation, Australian Sports Commission
Cameron serves as the Deputy General Manager of Participation at the Australian Sports Commission, where he is tasked with overseeing the organisation’s efforts to boost sports participation among Australians.
With over 20 years of experience in the sports industry, Cameron has held a variety of executive positions at the local, state, and national levels of the sports system. He brings a wealth of expertise to the table, including a deep understanding of organizational governance and reform, the development and delivery of participation programs, commercial partnerships, facility development, and workforce management.
In addition to his professional experience in the industry, Cameron is a volunteer coach for local sporting clubs, demonstrating his personal commitment to using sports as a vehicle for positive change. He understands the meaningful impact that volunteering can have on individuals and entire communities.
Cameron is passionate about improving the Australian sports system to ensure it is well positioned to deliver on its objectives and meet the needs of all stakeholders in the future.
Camilla Rowland
Chief Executive Officer, Palliative Care Australia
Camilla Rowland (EMBA GAICD) is the Chief Executive Officer of Palliative Care Australia (PCA). For over 30 years she has worked in the Australian health and community service sectors in CEO, executive, clinical, and educational roles. Over these years, Camilla has been engaged in supervisoring or providing oversight of hands-on volunteer programs and engaged with corporate volunteers.
Camilla’s breadth of experience extends beyond palliative care and includes aged care, disability services, drug and alcohol services, child youth and family services, and mental health. She has also had significant experience in industry workforce design and development, and volunteer management. In the early days Camilla completed a volunteer management certificate which changed the way she viewed volunteering leading to an understanding of the essential role volunteers play in the fabric of Australia.
Camilla has held representational and voluntary Board roles on health and community sector Boards and Committees in regional, state and national organisations, including 16 years based in rural Australia in VIC, NSW and QLD. This work has been primarily with advocacy and sector capacity building organisations, and this experience has been supported by qualifications including Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors, an Executive Master of Business Administration, as well as qualifications in social work, adult education, human resources and executive leadership.
Brianna Casey
Chief Executive Officer, Foodbank Australia
Brianna is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Foodbank Australia, the country’s largest food relief organisation, and is Australia’s representative for the Global Foodbanking Network. Brianna joined Foodbank Australia in 2016, following her successful term as CEO of Australian Childcare Alliance NSW. Prior to that, she spent 14 years in agri-politics, as CEO of Qld Farmers’ Federation and a Policy Director at NSW Farmers.
Brianna’s career has centred on her love of social policy and advocacy, and her passion for powerful story-telling. Brianna serves on a number of government committees across the portfolios of Social Services and Home Affairs, as well as the National Emergency Management Agency. She also played a key role in the development of the Australian Government’s first ever National Food Waste Strategy, as well as the successful bid committee for the Fight Food Waste Cooperative Research Centre.
Brianna was recently appointed to the National Strategy for Volunteering Council in light of her volunteering experience and expertise both professionally and personally. Brianna is passionate about volunteering in her local community, currently managing an under-18s National Premier League soccer team. She has a Bachelor of Science in Australian Environmental Studies, is a graduate of the iconic Australian Rural Leadership Program, a past recipient of the Pro Bono Australia Impact 25 Award and a proud member of Chief Executive Women.
Mohammad Al-Khafaji
Chief Executive Officer, Federation of Ethnic Communities’ Councils of Australia
Mohammad Al-Khafaji is the Chief Executive Officer of the Federation of Ethnic Communities’ Councils of Australia (FECCA), the peak national body representing Australians from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds.Born in Iraq, Mohammad came to Australia in 2003, via Syria, as a refugee at the age of 13. Mohammad lived in Iran and Syria and speaks Arabic and Farsi. He completed a Bachelor of Software Engineering at the University of Adelaide in 2012. Fluent in three languages, Mohammad’s personal experiences as a former refugee from Iraq and as a migrant also mean he can uniquely relate to so many issues facing multicultural communities. Mohammad has held positions at FECCA Executive Board, first as the Youth Chair and later as the Hon. Secretary.
In addition to his experience working with numerous multicultural groups and on many community boards, Mohammad worked for several years in the corporate sector. He has also served on the SBS Community Advisory Committee and the AdStandards community panel and is a member of the CALD Health Advisory Group on COVID-19 and the Health Performance Council of South Australia, advising the Commonwealth and State governments. Through his refugee journey to Australia, Mohammad has become passionate about the success of Australia’s Multiculturalism. He brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to his role with FECCA. Mohammad believes cultural diversity makes us richer as a society and he is passionate about ensuring the voices of new and emerging communities are heard and are represented. Mohammad was awarded the South Australian Governor’s Multicultural Award for Youth Achievement in 2012 and was a finalist in the 2018 SA Young Australian of the Year Awards.
DAY TWO
Plenary Session 4
THE INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
Plenary session 4 will offer a ‘big picture’ framing for Day two of the conference. We will hear from two leading international volunteer experts who will provide the global context. This will include highlighting how the future of volunteering is being discussed on the global stage, what are the big debates and trends, and how the new generation of young people are bringing fresh insights and perspectives on the future of volunteering.
Presenters: Narendra Mishra and Dr Mohsen Gul
Chair: Sarah Wilson, Volunteering Australia
Plenary 4: Speakers
Narendra Mishra
Policy Specialist and Team Lead, Integration, United Nations Volunteers Programmes/UNDP, New York
Narendra Mishra is the Team lead for Integration with United Nations Volunteers Programme/UNDP based at New York. He works to integrate volunteerism into the United Nations strategies and policies for achievement of SDGs. He also leads the team to advise on integration of volunteerism into government plans and policies and into the governments’ SDG reporting. He has been associated with UNV since 2013, having worked in Delhi, India and in Bonn, Germany before moving to UNV office in New York, USA.
In his 20 years work with United Nations, Narendra has also worked with UNDP in Bangladesh and India and with United Nations Peacekeeping Mission in Kosovo. Narendra holds a Masters Degree in Public Policy and Management and a Masters degree in Spatial Planning with specialisation in environment.
Dr Mohsen Gul
Senior Project Manager, Cambridge Institute of Sustainability Leadership, University of Cambridge (UK)
Dr Mohsen Gul is a senior project manager at the Cambridge Institute of Sustainability Leadership at the University of Cambridge (UK). Mohsen brings over a decade of experience working in multilateral development organisations, including as senior technical advisor at the Asian Development Bank and United Nations Development Programme. Mohsen has previously led research for HQ in Germany on research evidence for the Volunteerism Agenda 2030. He has also authored Pakistan’s national youth volunteering strategy and conduced country national situation analysis on volunteer infrastructure for voluntary national review to be submitted to UN in 2022. His doctoral research work focused on critically analysing how youth volunteering can be mainstreamed in multi-level sustainable governance processes in Asia-Pacific.
Plenary Session 5
VOLUNTEERING FOR THE COMMON GOOD: THE FUTURE OF CHARITIES AND THE NOT-FOR-PROFIT SECTOR
Plenary session 5 will explore the future of volunteering in the wider context of reform in the charities and not-for-profit sector. We will hear from leaders from across the charities and not-for-profit sector, who will discuss the hard questions about what needs to happen for charities and their volunteer workforces to thrive.
Keynote Address: The Hon Andrew Leigh MP, Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury
Panel: Sue Woodward, David Crosbie and Mark Pearce
Chair: Sarah Wilson, Volunteering Australia
Plenary 5: Speakers
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury
Andrew Leigh is the Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury, and Federal Member for Fenner in the ACT. Prior to being elected in 2010, Andrew was a professor of economics at the Australian National University. He holds a PhD in Public Policy from Harvard, having graduated from the University of Sydney with first class honours in Arts and Law. Andrew is a past recipient of the Economic Society of Australia’s Young Economist Award and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences.
His books include Disconnected (2010), Battlers and Billionaires: The Story of Inequality in Australia (2013), The Economics of Just About Everything (2014), The Luck of Politics (2015), Choosing Openness: Why Global Engagement is Best for Australia (2017), Randomistas: How Radical Researchers Changed Our World (2018), Innovation + Equality: How to Create a Future That Is More Star Trek Than Terminator (with Joshua Gans) (2019), Reconnected: A Community Builder’s Handbook (with Nick Terrell) (2020), What’s the Worst That Could Happen? Existential Risk and Extreme Politics (2021) and Fair Game: Lessons From Sport for a Fairer Society & a Stronger Economy (2022).
Andrew is the father of three sons – Sebastian, Theodore and Zachary, and lives with his wife Gweneth in Canberra. He has been a member of the Australian Labor Party since 1991.
*Photo by – Hilary Wardhaugh
Sue Woodward AM
Commissioner of the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profit Commission
On 12 December, Sue Woodward AM commenced as Commissioner of the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profit Commission (ACNC). Previously she was Chief Adviser for Not-for-profit Law with charity Justice Connect. Sue was awarded a Member of the Order of Australia in 2021 for “significant service to the not-for-profit sector, fundraising and the law.”
Sue played an instrumental role in the ACNC’s formation, as inaugural Director of Policy and Education. She has been involved with bodies including the Charities Crisis Cabinet, Victorian Government Volunteer Strategy Taskforce, Victorian Government’s Social Services Regulator Taskforce and the National Strategy for Volunteering Council.
David Crosbie
CEO, Community Council for Australia
David Crosbie is CEO of the Community Council for Australia; a role has had held for ten years. He and has spent more than 25 years as a CEO of significant not-for-profit organisations including as a CEO of the Mental Health Council of Australia, the Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia, and Odyssey House Victoria. He has served on many national advisory groups and Boards including the first Advisory Board for the Australian Charities and Not-for-profit Commission, the Not-for-Profit Sector Reform Council, Chair of the National Compact Expert Advisory Group, and an inaugural member (now a judge) of the Pro Bono Australia ‘Impact 25’ listing of the most influential leaders in Australian charities and not-for-profit sector. David has a diverse background having taught in prison and other special settings, been a probation officer, lectured at university, worked as a farm hand, truck driver, bank teller, public servant, and a musician in a successful rock band.
Mark Pearce
CEO, Volunteering Australia
Prior to joining Volunteering Australia, Mark was a senior executive at National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples and held senior investment banking and institutional funds management roles with Goldman Sachs, JBWere, nab, and Macquarie Bank.
Mark holds a Bachelor of Science (Politics and International Relations (Hons.)) from the London School of Economics and Political Science, a Graduate Diploma in Human Rights from School of Advanced Studies at the University of London and is currently studying for a Master of Public Policy at the Australian National University.
Driven by a strong belief in the transformative power of compassion, Mark applies his skills and expertise as a Non-Executive Director of Community Council for Australia, a member of the Emergency Relief National Coordination Group, and sustainable food company, Growrs Ltd. In addition to a passion for human rights, Mark is active in fighting for animal rights and is Deputy Chair of Australia’s leading animal protection organisation, Animals Australia.
Breakout Session 4
A. EVIDENCE & PRACTICE
A4: The evolution of sport volunteering – learning from evidence and practice
This session will showcase research and recent initiatives which are supporting the evolution of sport volunteering in Australia. It will appeal to those engaged with sport volunteering and those from other volunteering sectors that would like to learn from how sport is adapting in face of recent challenges. This session is being led by the Australian Sports Commission.
Presenters: Pam Kappelides and Scott Tutton
Facilitator: Matt Calf, Australian Sports Commission
A4: Presenters
Matt Calf
Senior Manager – Industry Projects, Australian Sports Commission
Passionate about the power of sport in building healthy, engaged, and productive communities, Matt has spent the past eighteen years driving increased nation-wide participation in sport and physical activity through the Australian Sports Commission’s flagship sport participation programs.
With extensive experience in national policy/program design and implementation, Matt is currently leading the delivery of the Australian Sports Commission’s Sport Volunteering National Plan – supporting the sport sector to re-think the volunteer experience and navigate the evolving volunteer landscape.
As a dedicated volunteer in several community sport organisations, Matt has a deep appreciation of the value of volunteering to individuals and communities. Matt is a member of the National Strategy for Volunteering Council, and contributed to the design of the National Strategy for Volunteering as a member of the Core Design Team.
Dr Pam Kappelides
Senior Lecturer, La Trobe University
Dr Pam Kappelides is an expert in the field of volunteer management, community development working with minority groups and the impact of sport participation and development in the community. Pam has secured several research projects and has consulted to many organisations and government agencies such as the VicHealth, YMCA, Special Olympics and Sport and Recreation Victoria. She specialises in qualitative research methodology and evaluations. She has also published in the area of volunteer management and sport management. Pam has also been a practitioner in the sport, health and recreation industry prior to an academic career and has a wealth of knowledge in the sector.
Scott Tutton
Head of Community Customer Support, Cricket Australia
Scott has over 12 years’ experience in leading the development and growth of community sport, through roles held at Netball Australia, Cricket Victoria and Cricket Australia. Scott’s current role of Head of Clubs and Volunteers at Cricket Australia is focused on ensuring that volunteers are continually supported to have exceptional experiences in delivering vibrant and attractive community competitions that showcase cricket as a sport for all.
Scott has studied Psychology and Human Resources at University of Wollongong, and completed a Masters of Sport Management with La Trobe University in 2019. In addition to studies, Scott has also held roles at Netball Australia leading the creation of their National Workforce Development Strategy and eLearning platform for volunteer coaches and umpires as well as pathway athletes, and ClubsNSW supporting volunteer club directors with the development of accredited courseware in strategic planning, finance, leadership and management development.
Jessica Cook
Director, Sport and Recreation Partnerships Office, Queensland Government
Jessica is a highly motivated leader with close to 13 years’ dedicated to the Sport and Recreation industry, currently working in the Department of Tourism, Innovation and Sport, Queensland Government. As the Director of the Sport and Recreation Partnerships Office, Jessica is responsible for driving engagement and collaboration with key stakeholders including government departments to identifying opportunities and partnerships that further contribute to a more active Queensland.
Skilled in strategic planning and policy development, Jessica was instrumental in the successful development of Queensland’s first ever 10-year sport and active recreation strategy “Activate! Queensland 2019 – 2029”.
In addition to working for Sport and Recreation, Jessica has been recognised for her extraordinary commitment to her local AFL club – Sandgate Hawks, where she volunteers her time coaching and helping out her local sporting community.
A4: Presentation Slides
B. INCLUSION, DIVERSITY & INTERSECTIONALITY
B4: Focus on multicultural perspectives
This session will explore the diversity of volunteering in multicultural communities across Australia. It will include presentations on two major new collaborative research projects on volunteering in Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) communities.
Presenters: Bingqin Li & Ivan Wong and Paul Muller & Gemma Rygate
Facilitator: Mel Blake, Volunteering Tasmania
B4: Presenters
Bingqin Li
Professor, Social Policy Research Centre, University of New South Wales
Professor Bingqin Li is a professor at the Social Policy Research Centre at UNSW. She received her PhDs from London School of Economics UK and Nankai University in China. Her research interest is in social policy governance. Her current research projects include collaborative governance, local governance of complex social programs, and volunteering and social isolation in the CALD population. She is an Executive Board Member of the East Asian Social Policy Research Network. She is also the founding associate editor of the Elsevier journal Urban Governance. She has consulted multiple UN agencies and international NGOs on social policy in urbanisation.
Ivan Wong
General Manager, Home Ageing Services, CASS
Ivan Wong got his Bachelor of Social Science Degree from the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Certificate in Education from the Hong Kong University. Currently he is the General Manager, Home Ageing Services of CASS, which provides a wide range of services to the community, covering from childcare to aged care. Ivan has over 28 years’ experience working with volunteers, managing volunteers, and promoting volunteering in his different positions in CASS. Ivan has special interests in developing volunteers from CALD background and supporting well aged people to volunteer in community development and participation activities.
Paul Muller
Director, Institute of Project Management
Prior to co-founding the Institute of Project Management, Paul enjoyed 15 years of senior management experience across Australia, Asia and Europe in a wide range of project-driven businesses. He currently advises a diverse community of public, private and not-for-profit organisations on management issues relating to strategy, risk, projects, operations, marketing and people. In the early 2000’s, Paul was engaged at the Australian Innovation Research Centre as a PhD scholar, extending his postgraduate qualifications in International Sports Management and Law. A published author, he has pioneered new approaches to research in volunteering, sport and the creative industries, and has presented his unique perspective on value as a keynote speaker at a number of international conferences and events. Paul has a particular interest in challenging institutional assumptions and improving the quality of executive decision making, as is excited now to be mentoring and inspiring the next generation of creative and critical thinkers.
Gemma Rygate
Chief Executive Officer, The Centre for Volunteering
Gemma Rygate has over twenty-five years’ experience as an executive, senior manager, consultant and facilitator across the not-for-profit, public and private sectors. She is currently the Chief Executive Officer of The Centre for Volunteering. Prior to that, Gemma held the position of Executive Director: National, of the Institute of Public Administration Australia.
Gemma is a graduate of ACU and UNSW. After completing her Bachelor of Education and Master of Arts Degrees, she spent many years as a Department Head in secondary education in NSW. Gemma managed a state wide assessment team for over 10 years, she volunteered with a NGO in Cambodia annually for over 10 years, and she also manages a large pastoral holding in the state’s Central West. She is a non-executive director on a NFP Board and Company Secretary for two NFPs. Since transitioning from teaching, Gemma has held Chief Executive positions for several years and has facilitated leadership workshops for groups locally and abroad.
B4: Presentation Slides
C. LEADERSHIP & INNOVATION
C4: Innovations in governance & strategy
This session will explore the vital role of volunteer board members in ensuring effective governance, how leadership and strategic insights are vital to innovation, and will raise awareness of the importance of insurance and risk management.
Presenters: Derek Turner, Brad Cooper and Julia Gaoyuan Huang
Facilitator: Meredith Blais, Volunteering WA
C4: Presenters
Derek Turner
Client Director, Not for Profit, Aon
Derek is a Client Manager within the Not for Profit team where he specialises in the management of association partners and peak bodies, including the onboarding new NFP clients and development of education materials for NFP’s. Derek’s responsibilities also include assisting in management of the Not for Profit team through in-depth policy reviews, day to day account management of associations and large clients and placement of insurance programs.
Brad Cooper
Chief Executive Officer, Volunteering Gold Coast
Brad has worked in Not-For-Profit organisations for the majority of his working life. He has over 15 years of experience in senior operational and executive roles in human services organisations across Victoria, Tasmania, and Queensland.
Brad began his career as a Nurse moving from hospitals into tertiary education and research, then transitioned to community aged care, homelessness services, and mental health services.
Brad’s focus is on outcomes and impact for service users and employees, drawing on the collective wisdom and insights across the organisation.
Brad has held volunteer roles as a board member and project roles developing professional practice standards.
Julia Gaoyuan Huang
PhD candidate, Tasmanian School of Business and Economics, University of Tasmania
I am Julia, a second-year PhD candidate at the Tasmanian School of Business and Economics, University of Tasmania. My research explores how to sustain volunteer board members’ engagement in community service organisations in Australia. I am enthusiastic about volunteer leadership and nonprofit governance research.
C4: Presentation Slides
D. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE LIFECYCLE
D4: Volunteering in health settings
This session will explore volunteering in health settings including how to develop a competency framework for health volunteer management and the strategies, practices and engagement methods that work in this environment.
Presenters: Sharon Walsh, Rachel Winterton and Nicky Pearson
Facilitator: Cindy West, Volunteering Australia
D4: Presenters
Sharon Walsh
Director, Volunteer Services, Bendigo Health
Sharon is the Director, Volunteer Services for Bendigo Health, the Founder/Chair of the LOHVE Network and the driving force behind their annual Benchmark aimed at understanding health volunteer programs. Sharon is passionate about enhancing the health volunteer sector and has presented, locally, nationally and internationally such as the IAVE Conference in Kuala Lumpur (2017) and more recently invited to share her experience with 46 hospitals for the Hong Kong Hospital Authority. Sharon was humbled to participate as a member of the Victorian Volunteer Strategy Taskforce and the National Volunteering Strategy Core Design Team. Sharon is also current the Project Lead for the Loddon Mallee Health Network (LMHN) Volunteer Strategy which was developed to volunteering across the 16 public health services who now make up the LMHN and which has led to attaining a seat ‘at the decision making table’ alongside the LMHN CEOs, working together and shaping their future for health volunteering for this region.
Rachel Winterton
Senior Research Fellow, John Richards Centre for Rural Ageing Research, La Trobe University
Rachel is a senior research fellow with the John Richards Centre for Rural Ageing Research at La Trobe University. She is internationally recognised for her research examining the role of the volunteer sector in supporting rural healthy ageing and is particularly interested in how governments and communities can support engagement of rural older volunteers. Rachel has published extensively in key international journals on topics associated with volunteering, and was called as an expert witness to the recent Royal Commission for Aged Care Quality and Safety to highlight the role of volunteering in supporting rural aged care.
Nicky Pearson
Volunteer Services Manager, Children’s Hospital Foundation
Nicky Pearson is the Volunteer Services Manager for the Children’s Hospital Foundation. She offers her services to other Health based not for profits as a support for their volunteer recruitment, program development and program delivery as well as volunteer engagement needs. She is a firm believer in helping her community and likes to say her job is to ‘help people help people’. She is known for utilising her passion for inspiring people, evidence-based strategies and aligning her innovative thinking with global volunteer trends around engaging, supporting, and acknowledging the work of volunteers. Nicky has over 12 years direct experience in volunteer management, recruitment, program development, program coordination, training delivery and learning design across a wide range of family centred care initiatives and within government agencies.
D4: Presentation Slides
E. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE NATION
E4: Regional & rural perspectives
This session will explore volunteering in rural and regional Australia. Presentations will include the modern history of rural volunteering interventions in Australia and insights from a volunteer powered healthcare provider (Angel Flight) and how their volunteers support rural and remote communities.
Presenters: Marjorie Pagani and Professor Leonie Lockstone-Binney, Professor Kirsten Holmes, Professor Melanie Oppenheimer, Professor Amanda Davies & Dr Annette Maher
Facilitator: Mara Basanovic, Volunteering Queensland
E4: Speakers
Marjorie Pagani
CEO, Angel Flight
Marjorie became the CEO in early 2015, although she has supported the Charity in other ways from the beginning. She is a practising barrister who assisted Angel Flight, on a pro-bono basis, particularly in aviation law, since the inception of the charity in 2003. She was also one of the first volunteer pilots and holds a commercial pilot license. She was a long-serving presiding member of the Qld Anti-Discrimination Tribunal, the Queensland Mental Health Review Tribunal, and the former North Qld Parole Board, as has held positions on both government and private Boards. She retired from the RAAF after 17 years of service as a Squadron Leader in the RAAF specialist legal corps reserve and is a member of the James Cook University Council, and the Torres and Cape Hospital and Health Service Board.
Professor Leonie Lockstone-Binney
Associate Professor, Griffith University
Professor Leonie Lockstone-Binney is based in the Department of Tourism, Sport and Hotel Management at Griffith University, Australia. Leonie’s research expertise relates to volunteering, contextualised to event and tourism settings. Leonie has published over 95 peer-reviewed articles, many of these in top-tier journals. She has received competitive research funding from the Australian Research Council and the International Olympic Committee and continues to collaborate with leading researchers from Australia, the UK and New Zealand.
Professor Kirsten Holmes
Professor, School of Management and Marketing, Curtin
University
Professor Kirsten Holmes is an internationally-recognised expert in the study of volunteering, particularly in events, leisure, sport and tourism contexts; rural volunteering; non-volunteers; and student volunteering. Kirsten has taught at universities in Australia and the UK, conducted research projects across 15 countries, and published over 80 peer reviewed papers. She is the lead editor of the Routledge Handbook of Volunteering in Events, Sport and Tourism (2021).
Kirsten’s research has been funded by the Australian Research Council, the Australian Government, the UK Government, the International Olympic Committee and she is currently working with Men’s Sheds of WA. Kirsten is Co-Chair of Volunteering Australia’s National Volunteering Research Network, and Chair of Volunteering WA’s research committee.
Professor Melanie Oppenheimer
Professor Emerita, Australian National University
Chair, NSV Research Working Group
Professor Melanie Oppenheimer is currently based in the School of History at the Australian National University. Previously she was Professor of History at Flinders University (and awarded the title of Professor Emerita) and has held positions in Australian history at the University of Western Sydney and the University of New England. In 2018-19, she was the Visiting Chair in Australian Studies at the University of Tokyo. A Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and appointed to the Australian Research Council’s College of Experts (2016-18), Melanie has recently completed a two-year term as President of the Australian Historical Association.
For over twenty-five years, Melanie has been exploring the role of voluntary organisations, volunteers and voluntary action in times of war and peace, in contemporary and historical contexts, with a special interest in the Australian Red Cross and the global Red Cross Movement. She is the author of multiple books and published widely including The Red Cross Movement, edited with Neville Wylie and James Crossland (2020); Volunteering. Why we can’t survive without it (2008); The Power of Humanity (2014), and All Work. No Pay. Australian Volunteers in War (2002), short-listed for the NSW Premiers’ History Awards. Melanie was a member of the Federal Government’s National Volunteering Strategy Advisory Group (2009-10); involved with the SA Volunteering Strategy (2015-17); and has been delighted to be a member of VA’s National Strategy for Volunteering Council and Chair of the Research Working Group (2022). In October last year, she delivered the JC Bannon Oration, ‘Volunteering for the Ages’ in Adelaide.
Professor Amanda Davies
Professor, Head of University of Western Australia’s School of Social Sciences
Professor Amanda Davies is a social scientist with expertise in demography, population geography and rural and regional development. Her research focuses on examining Australia’s population growth, distribution and patterns of demographic change, particularly in response to economic, social or climatic challenges. Her work also focuses on exploring the social, economic and environmental issues related to rural and regional development, particularly in mining and agricultural communities.
Dr Annette Maher
Research Assistant, College of Arts and Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Dr. Annette Maher is a Research Assistant, College of Arts and Social Sciences, The Australian National University. Annette has a long history in volunteering, working for Volunteering Australia and Volunteering Victoria. She has edited two journals, Australian Journal on Volunteering (2000-2010) and Australian Association of Community Work Journal (2019-2021). This is the third ARC funded project where Annette has been engaged.
E4: Presentation Slides
Breakout Session 5
A. EVIDENCE & PRACTICE
A5: International volunteering lessons
Workshop attendees will hear inspirational real-life examples of how volunteers have transitioned from international volunteering to local volunteering and the benefits they gained. Delegates will gain a deeper understanding of international volunteering and be able to share that knowledge with their networks. This interactive workshop is led by the Australian Government’s Australian Volunteers Program.
Presenters: John Lalor & Madeleine Legge
Facilitator: Leela Galvez, Australian Volunteers Program
A5: Presenters
John Lalor
Volunteer Alumni, Australian Volunteers Program
John was a former senior executive with the Department of Finance, and had spent over twenty years in senior management roles over many diverse program and policy areas. He retired from the public service in 2007 to work as a consultant/contract and dedicate his time to volunteering in South East Asia. He has undertaken many specialist volunteer assignments over the past decade. John has always welcomed the opportunity to work with organisations to build their capability, grow and prepare for the future. His particularly interest is working with NGOs and social enterprises to plan head and operate in a continuously disrupted world. During the COVID period he has undertaken two remote volunteer assignments in Cambodia and Vietnam and is currently on remote assignment in Vietnam. His current assignment is with a fledgling social enterprise, Hopebox, that works with survivors of gender-based violence. From his experience John considers that in-country and remote assignments are valuable to organisations in their development and personally rewarding for the volunteers.“I’ve maintained an ongoing network through my volunteer assignments and made many long-term friendships.”
Madeleine Legge
Volunteer Alumni, Australian Volunteers Program
Madeleine lives in Darwin and currently works for NT Health in the Activity Based Funding team.
Madeleine’s interest in moving to Darwin arose partly from her experience in Tonga as an Australian volunteer 10 years ago.
Madeleine volunteered as an Economic Policy Analyst for the Tongan Ministry of Infrastructure and assisted the ministry with their corporate plan and a new website. In her spare time in Tonga Madeleine explored the beautiful country, tried to learn Tongan and made many great friends. She also volunteered for a small community organisation, Pasikala Nuku’alofa, Tonga’s only cycling group.
As in Tonga, volunteering locally in Darwin has expanded my skills and connected me more closely to my now home. I learnt to sail while volunteering for Rotakat, a local sailing program for young people experiencing social barriers and have had the opportunity to volunteer in a liaison capacity to coordinate a delegation of athletes from Tonga and Nauru during Darwin’s 2019 Arafura Games.
Being part of Australia’s international volunteer program is a privilege and a great opportunity for all Australians.
B. INCLUSION, DIVERSITY & INTERSECTIONALITY
B5: Focus on settlement experiences
The Australian refugee settlement sector relies heavily on volunteers and volunteering is often a means of new arrivals settling successfully to Australia. This session will explore how to improve access to volunteer opportunities for people from refugee and migrant backgrounds.
Presenters: Anja Wendt, Emma Antonetti and Janet Irvine & Kat O’Neill
Facilitator: Heba Al Adawy, Volunteering Australia
B5: Presenters
Anja Wendt
PhD scholar, University of New South Wales
Anja Wendt is a PhD scholar at the University of New South Wales. Her thesis is titled ‘The Relationship Between Volunteers and the Refugee Settlement Sector in Australia’. The research examines motivation and experiences of the people supporting refugees on their settlement journey in Australia. The study focuses on the relationship of those providing settlement support including people with lived experience and member from the wider Australian community. Anja has volunteered in several refugee organisations herself.
Emma Antonetti
Manager Equity & Impact, Whittlesea Community Connections
Emma is the Manager Equity & Impact at Whittlesea Community Connections. Emma has worked in the community sector for more than 20 years with experience delivering settlement services with new arrival migrants and refugees, volunteer and employment services and a range of community based projects with the aim of engaging and empowering community. Emma has a Masters in Social Policy and recently completed a Community Fellows with the University of Melbourne.
Janet Irvine
Manager SSI Diversity Training, Settlement Services International
Janet has over 30 years of experience working within settlement and child safety sectors as a psychologist, caseworker, advocate and facilitator of adult education. Janet is passionate about creating learning spaces where people can engage with respectful curiosity and find ways to create a world where everyone feels valued and can find a place to belong. Janet enjoys working with a diverse range of organisations to understand their needs and deliver learning solutions that support more culturally responsive and trauma informed workplaces and services. Janet grew up on Wiradjuri land, lives on Gadigal land and acknowledges First Nations sovereignty and the custodianship of elders past and present.
Kat O’Neill
Community Engagement Manager, Settlement Services International
Kat O’Neill is a positive deep thinker interested in learning from our past to find innovative ways to create strong connected communities. She is the Community Engagement Manager at SSI supporting multicultural communities to connect with the wider community including through SSI’s Volunteer Program. Kat has worked in various roles at NGOs, local state and federal Governments and Consultancies. She doesn’t believe one aspect of a community can be improved without looking at it as a whole.
C. LEADERSHIP & INNOVATION
C5: Innovating for Impact
This session will showcase innovative examples of social impact measurement and strategies for promoting the benefits of volunteer involvement, and the need for organisational leadership in this endeavour.
Presenters: Simon Vaughn & Kate Thiele, Dannika White and Penny Aquino
Facilitator: Thu-Trang Tran, Volunteering Victoria
C5: Presenters
Simon Vaughan
Simon Vaughan, Measurement Lead, Huber Social
Simon Vaughan is a Measurement Lead at Huber Social where he runs social impact measurement projects across a range of sectors including education. Prior to this, he worked as a fundraiser in international development for over a decade across a broad swathe of fundraising areas, raising millions for the organisations he worked for.
Kate Thiele
National Executive Director, Meals on Wheels® Australia.
Kate Thiele is the National Executive Director for Meals on Wheels® Australia. She is also a Board Chair, Non-Executive Director, and Principal of Klarity, where she supports for-purpose, government, and private organisations with a range of strategic environmental, social and governance advice. Kate is an award-winning business leader – previous CEO of Guide Dogs SA/NT and GM, Business Development, Marketing and Communicatelise
ions at Cancer Council SA. Her corporate career included executive roles in manufacturing retail and health.
Kate’s current Board roles include – President Skylight Mental Health, Chair Adelaide Crows Foundation and Board Member of the Flinders Foundation. Kate will be joined on-stage by Huber Social’s Simon Vaughan.
Dannika White
Director of Community, Be Collective
Dannika is an experienced leader who has specialised in implementing transformation and change within a number of industries. She now applies a foundation in communication management together with broad business experience to the community sector. She currently works with charities, not-for-profits and community groups helping them implement programs which attract, engage and retain volunteers.
Penny Aquino
General Manager – Volunteer Resources, The Salvation Army
Penny has held volunteer management roles at World Vision, RSPCA and currently holds a national role as GM – Volunteer Resources at the Salvos, equalling over 17 years in the sector. In each organisation she has successfully advocated for an increase in strategic and resource investment to ensure current sustainability and future growth through volunteer involvement. Penny sees voluntarism as the vehicle in which to create a fairer and more inclusive society and is passionate to see more Australians serve causes, they care about. Penny has recently completed a master’s in Leadership and Management (Organisation Dynamics) and has qualifications in change management and training
C5: Presentation Slides
D. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE LIFECYCLE
D5: Volunteering in aged care settings
This session will focus on the vital role of volunteers in aged care. Presentations will include reflections on the 2022 Re-engaging Volunteers in Residential Aged Care Facilities program and the sharing of good practice guides and research findings from a Western Australia study.
Presenters: Kirsten Turner and Megan Paull
Facilitators: Hamilton Calder and David Jacquier, Volunteering SA&NT
D5: Presenters
Kirsten Turner
Director of the Consumer Support Section, Department of Health and Aged Care
Kirsten Turner is the Director of the Consumer Support Section, Department of Health and Aged Care. The section has a focus on older Australians, including those who are vulnerable and isolated, to ensure they are supported and empowered as they engage with the aged care and health systems. Kirsten has worked with governments and communities in evaluation, policy and programs across various government organisations in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander public health and language; and aged care volunteering, dementia and diversity. Throughout her life Kirsten has been a committed volunteer in the community, environment and with refugees.
Dr Megan Paull
Senior Lecturer & Postgraduate Research Chair, Murdoch University
Dr Megan Paull is a long term volunteering researcher who has often investigated the more challenging aspects of volunteering and volunteer management. Megan’s focus on practical outcomes for volunteers and volunteer managers means that those who participate in her research are able to see how their contribution can lead to better volunteering experiences. Megan’s current research is on volunteering in aged care settings.
D5: Presentation Slides
E. VOLUNTEERING ACROSS THE NATION
E5: The legal and employment context
This session will illuminate the contemporary legal and employment context for volunteering and highlight important practical insights and tools for volunteer leaders and others across the volunteering ecosystem.
Presenters: Amy Williams, Matt Cowgill & Rebecca Miller
Facilitator: Gemma Rygate, The Centre for Volunteering
E5: Speakers
Amy Williams
Principal Lawyer, Justice Connect’s Not-for-profit Law program
Amy was admitted to practice as a solicitor in 2015 and commenced her legal career as a solicitor at the commercial law firm, Corrs Chambers Westgarth.
As a lawyer at Justice Connect, Amy regularly provides legal advice, training and assistance to community organisations across Australia on various legal issues, including legal issues relating to volunteer management.
Amy sits on the board of Volunteering Australia, the not-for-profit national peak body for volunteering. Prior to becoming a solicitor, Amy was a social worker working with a range of small to medium sized not-for-profit organisation.
Matt Cowgill
Senior Economist, SEEK
Matt Cowgill is SEEK’s Senior Economist. He has previously worked as Chief Technical Adviser at the UN’s International Labour Organization, as a senior researcher at Grattan Institute, and as a senior executive in the Victorian Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions. SEEK’s is Australia’s most visited employment site.
Rebecca Miller
Head of Seek Volunteer
Rebecca Miller has been leading SEEK Volunteer for over five years and prior to that led a number of social impact programs for NAB. SEEK Volunteer has been connecting volunteers with volunteer involving organisations for 23 years, making it one of the longest social impact investments of a technology company in Australia.
E5: Presentation Slides
Plenary Session 6
THE FUTURE IS NOW, SO WHAT NEXT?
Plenary session 6 will be run by the next generation of young volunteer researchers, managers, policymakers, and others. The panel will reflect on their insights from the conference and a facilitated discussion will cover some key questions that are vital to the future of volunteering.
Presenters: Amber Tsai, Bridget Delaney and Jack McDermott
Chair: Sarah Wilson, Volunteering Australia
Plenary 6: Speakers
Amber Tsai
PhD Candidate, University of Tasmania
Amber Tsai is in her 3rd year pursuing her PhD in volunteer leadership studies at the University of Tasmania. Her research delves into emergency service volunteers’ preferred leader behaviours and motivations. Prior to her PhD program, she sought to cultivate meaningful connections between international students and local communities by founding a Tasmanian Volunteer Tour program in 2017 – which continues running today. She also teaches Introduction to Emergency Management and Leadership in Organisations for university-level courses at the University of Tasmania.
Bridget Delaney
Strategic Manager, ‘Innovate and Lead’, Volunteering Tasmania
Bridget is the Strategic Manager for ‘Innovate and Lead’ at Volunteering Tasmania. For the past 15 years, she has provided learning and development opportunities across local and international industries, finding creative and fun ways to develop spaces for strategic thinking like in Change Your Impact a leadership program for aspiring community service leaders. Bridget has been highlighting the contributions young people are making in their communities with the Youth Volunteer Army in partnership with Student Volunteer Army NZ since December 2021. Insight and learnings from the program contribute to state-wide growth and continue to shape the future of volunteering, where young people are showing us where to go…
Jack McDermott
Policy Officer, Volunteering Australia
Jack graduated from the Australian National University in 2020 with a Bachelor of International Relations (Honours) and a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in Political Science.
Jack is a Policy Officer at Volunteering Australia. In this role, he contributes to Volunteering Australia’s current policy and advocacy work on mental health, disability, emergency management, rural volunteering, and youth volunteering.
Zac Reimers
Policy, Research and Advocacy Lead, Volunteering Queensland
Zac Reimers is the Policy, Research and Advocacy Lead at Volunteering Queensland: the state peak body for volunteering. He investigates research and policy changes to look for benefits and new approaches for volunteering. Through this role, he also communicates the issues faced by Queensland’s volunteers to governments, researchers and other stakeholders. Before joining Volunteering Queensland, Zac coordinated volunteers for large cultural events including Brisbane Festival, the Woodford Folk Festival, World Science Festival and the arts component of the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games.