Women of Colour Leadership & Allyship Summit
Be inspired, break stereotypes & lead with confidence
The 3rd Public Sector Women of Colour Leadership & Allyship Summit 2024 will amplify the voices of inspiring women of colour, showcasing their remarkable leadership journeys as they navigate personal challenges, celebrate their individuality and defy stereotypes of what it means to be a leader.
Discussions will address critical issues such as the prevalence of the bamboo ceiling, racism and its impact on mental health and performance, the role of sponsorship to support career advancement and practical solutions and strategies to address the many barriers faced by CALD & CARM women of colour in the public sector. Join this summit and gain actionable insights to drive systemic changes to create a truly inclusive public sector that reflects multicultural modern australia.
Why attend
Be inspired by first hand accounts of resilience and authenticity from women of colour in public sector leadership
Explore systemic biases and entrenched stereotypes that persist within the APS, hindering the advancement of women of colour
Gain insights on creating a truly inclusive public sector that supports and welcomes women from diverse backgrounds
Challenge your own biases and deepen your understanding of allyship, advocacy and anti-racism
Speakers
Tharani Jegatheeswaran She/Her
National Relationships Leader, National Social Impact Leader & National Race & Culture Leader
Deloitte Australia
Tahlia-Rose Vanissum She/Her
Woppaburra women, Chairperson, Sisters in Spirit Aboriginal Corporation
Chair, Ministerial Advisory Council on Women, ACT Government
Dr Tinashe Dune She/Her
Director & Senior Clinical Psychologist, Dune Health and Wellbeing, President, African Women Australia Inc
Associate Professor in Translational Health Research, Western Sydney University
Jacqueline Mayer She/Her
Director | Multicultural Affairs Branch , Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs Division
Department of Home Affairs
Xiaoyan Lu She/Her
A/g Group Executive Director, Systems Assurance and Data Analytics Group
Australian National Audit Office
Dr Shamaruh Mirza She/Her
Senior Regulatory scientist
Department of Health and Aged Care, Member, ANU Women Alumni Network steering committee, ACT 2023 Local Hero (Australian of the year Awards), Co-founder SiTara’s Story
Christina Li She/Her
Head of Governance, Strategy & External Relations Division
Museums of History NSW
Jessica Singh She/Her
Principal Project Manager | Anti-Racism Unit & Chair, Multicultural Network
Department of Communities and Justice
Dr Bilquis Ghani She/Her
Lecturer in Arts, University of Canberra academic, former Head of Inclusion
Sydney Opera House, Lead of the Hunar collective
Dr Elaine Laforteza She/Her
Equity and Diversity Project Officer (Cultural Diversity)
University of Technology Sydney, Host of award-winning SBS podcast My Bilingual Family
Michelle Lim (She/Her)
Organisational Culture & Change Lead, Deputy Chair Race and Cultural Identity Employee Resource Group (R&CI ERG), 40 under 40 Most Influential Asian Australian
Reserve Bank of Australia
Mandy Young (She/Her)
Gomeroi Woman & Chief Executive
State Insurance Regulatory Authority NSW
Nu Nu Win She/Her
Assistant Secretary, PhD candidate (Economics), Sir Roland Wilson Scholar (Treasury)
Department of Treasury, Australian National University
Dr. Varina Michaels She/Her
Executive Director, Women of Colour Australia (WoCA),
Educator, Global DEI Consultant, Published Academic
Who will attend?
Public sector organisations including:
- Current and emerging Women of Colour Leaders & their Allies from Federal, State & Local Government that identify as part of the Culturally and Linguistically Diverse (CALD) & Culturally and Racially Marginalised (CARM)
- Current and emerging leaders who identify as Allies to Women of Colour and the CALD & CARM community
- Officers & Manager through to Director & SES
- CALD Champions & members of CALD Networks in the Public Sector
- Directors, Heads & Managers of Multicultural Networks
- HR, Diversity & Capability Professionals & Leaders
- Diversity and Inclusion Managers, Leaders & Officers
Agenda
Session times are shown in AEST
Welcome to Country
Opening remarks
Juliana Nkrumah AM She/Her
Founder & President
African Women Australia Inc. (AWAU)
You have to be in it to win it, backing yourself for success
- Carrying the burden of representation and self protection
- Confronting racism and how you navigate people’s perceptions and break down stereotypes?
- How do you protect yourself and build resilience internally especially as you become a senior leader
Mandy Young (She/Her)
Gomeroi Woman & Chief Executive
State Insurance Regulatory Authority NSW
Tales of an accidental public servant
- My career journey to date and reflections on my journey into leadership
- Balancing life with change, promotion or breaks through a career
- Being yourself and playing to your strengths, including in job choices and in leadership
Oanh Thi Tran (She/Her)
Commissioner
Fair Work Commission
Morning tea
Exploring the career experience of Asian Australians: Examples from Asian Australians & the prevalent bamboo & cultural ceilings
- Unpacking the racial (systemic) barriers in organisations
- Understanding agency and career strategies of Asian Australians
- Key Recommendations for organisations to better support the careers of Asian Australians
Amy Choi PhD She/Her
Assistant Director - Immigration Policy
Department of Home Affairs
Moving beyond the question of the existence of Racism: How to be actively anti-racist?
- How can we ensure anti-racism strategies embrace the complexity of intersectionality, addressing the unique challenges faced by women of colour?
- What practical steps can individuals take to become effective allies in the fight against racism?
- How do we recognise our privileges and extend allyship to various marginalised groups, including our first nations women and women of colour?
- What concrete actions can be implemented immediately to address systemic racism?
- What does an antiracist ally look like?
Manisha Amin She/Her
Chief Executive Officer
Centre for Inclusive Design
Dr Bilquis Ghani She/Her
Lecturer in Arts, University of Canberra academic, former Head of Inclusion
Sydney Opera House, Lead of the Hunar collective
Dr Elaine Laforteza She/Her
Equity and Diversity Project Officer (Cultural Diversity)
University of Technology Sydney, Host of award-winning SBS podcast My Bilingual Family
Dr Virginia Mapedzahama She/Her
Director of Research, African Women Australia (AWAU) & Member Education Director
Diversity Council Australia
Networking Session
SPEED NETWORKING – In person
In this fun, interactive session, you will have the opportunity to meet fellow attendees and speakers in two minute bursts, to exchange business cards and set up conversations for the rest of the event.
SPEED NETWORKING – Online Attendees via Zoom
In this live networking activity on Zoom meetings, you will be placed in small groups where you will meet and share challenges, advice and tips with your peers from across the sector. Forge lasting connections and gain the wisdom of your peers in this interactive networking experience
Lunch
The impact of racism on mental health & performance for CALD & CARM women
- What is the impact of racial discrimination on mental health and wellbeing ?
- How can organisations cultivate inclusive environments to alleviate the impact of racism on employee mental health and performance?
- How can women of colour navigate internalised racism and stereotypes that can affect their self-perception?
- Unpacking the psychological toll of being the tokenistic/only woman of colour at work
A/ Professor Kathomi Gatwiri PhD
DECRA Fellow and President
Australian Women & Gender Studies Association (AWGSA)
Dr Tinashe Dune She/Her
Director & Senior Clinical Psychologist, Dune Health and Wellbeing, President, African Women Australia Inc
Associate Professor in Translational Health Research, Western Sydney University
Dr Virginia Mapedzahama She/Her
Director of Research, African Women Australia (AWAU) & Member Education Director
Diversity Council Australia
Dr Shamaruh Mirza She/Her
Senior Regulatory scientist
Department of Health and Aged Care, Member, ANU Women Alumni Network steering committee, ACT 2023 Local Hero (Australian of the year Awards), Co-founder SiTara’s Story
How to use your lived experience to change systems & not just promote your brand
- My DEI journey: turning lived experience into systemic change
- The limits of today’s DEI
- Shifting the DEI focus from conversations about individuals to making our systems accountable
- Getting clear on the real challenges of creating change in complex and siloed systems
- Tips on spotting tokenistic DEI and predatory allyship
Niveditha Balachandran She/Her
Inclusion and Diversity Lead
Transport Accident Commission Victoria
Afternoon tea
Yenn Purkis (They/Them)
Author, Autism Advocate & Inclusion Officer
Australian Public Service
Centering voices & not consulting: What organisations can do to listen to CARM women?
Round Table A What initiatives within organisations can foster a supportive environment for women of colour, and how can allies contribute?
Round Table B How can we lean more on allies to do the heavy lifting and redistributing the cognitive and emotional load? What do we want from allies?
Dr Virginia Mapedzahama She/Her
Director of Research, African Women Australia (AWAU) & Member Education Director
Diversity Council Australia
Sheetal Deo (She/Her)
Senior Project Manager (RISE project)
Diversity Council Australia
Removing structural racism & sexism in hiring, pay, development & promotion systems
- Lived Experience Public Service Case-Studies of the structural barriers and biases women of colour face in the talent management system with implications to mental health and reduced career aspirations
- Guiding examples of removing structural racism and sexism in job and promotional and development criteria
- Influencing intersectional gender change with executives: The power of qualitative and quantitative data and co-designed action plans
Div Pillay She/Her
Chief Executive Officer
MindTribes, Researcher, Gender, Race & Ethnicity Practitioner & AFR 100 Women of Influence
Being Blak on the Hill
- My journey from social services into Parliament
- The significance of Blak representation in Politics, and the path paved by my matriarchs.
- Navigating cultural load in politics
- Strategies for driving systemic change
Senator Jana Stewart
Labor Senator for Victoria
Closing remarks
Acknowledgement of Country & Opening remarks
Juliana Nkrumah AM She/Her
Founder & President
African Women Australia Inc. (AWAU)
My leadership journey: Reckoning with internalised racism & combating age discrimination in leadership forums
- Sharing the lived experience of young Aboriginal women with disability
- Confronting intersectional discrimination and harnessing my experiences as a catalyst for change
- Unpacking intersectionality, feminism and Indigenous feminism and their roles in shaping future-ready policy
- Strategies that can be used to challenge and dismantle systemic racism, and foster inclusivity
Tahlia-Rose Vanissum She/Her
Woppaburra women, Chairperson, Sisters in Spirit Aboriginal Corporation
Chair, Ministerial Advisory Council on Women, ACT Government
Becoming a mentor to strengthen your leadership & support the next generation
- My personal journey and how mentoring has helped me to navigate challenges as a woman of colour
- Reverse mentoring – how diversity in the mentor/mentee relationship can strengthen your leadership and support organisational change.
- Tips for mentees – how to make the most of your mentor
Jacqueline Mayer She/Her
Director | Multicultural Affairs Branch , Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs Division
Department of Home Affairs
Morning tea
Data and Diversity
- Experience vs Evidence: driving cultural change using data and analysis.
- Learn about the different datasets that can be leveraged for diversity, equity and inclusion analysis
- How to conduct impactful analysis
Nu Nu Win She/Her
Assistant Secretary, PhD candidate (Economics), Sir Roland Wilson Scholar (Treasury)
Department of Treasury, Australian National University
The power of persistence & purpose
- Key reflections and pivotal moments from my life and career
- Balancing culture and community, supporting and empowering the next generation
- Building my personal brand and overcoming stereotypes, perceptions and embracing my authentic self
Tharani Jegatheeswaran She/Her
National Relationships Leader, National Social Impact Leader & National Race & Culture Leader
Deloitte Australia
Women of Colour Australia: Empowering Communities with Research-Driven Programs and Proven Results
- Introducing Women of Colour Australia’s groundbreaking programs and our impact on Women of Colour and their organisations.
- Unpacking the power of our Women of Colour community: Key indicators of impact from our programs, designed through co-creation and our ground-breaking, first-hand research.
- Unveiling Women of Colour Australia’s exciting plans for the future and how attendees can get involved in supporting and participating in our initiatives
Brenda Gaddi she/her/siya
Founder & Executive Director
Women of Colour Australia (WoCA)
Shazya Khan She/Her
Member, Growth & Sustainability Team
Women of Colour Australia (WoCA)
Dr. Varina Michaels She/Her
Executive Director, Women of Colour Australia (WoCA),
Educator, Global DEI Consultant, Published Academic
Lunch
My intersectional leadership journey: Being a queer Asian Christian woman
- Finding strength in your personal journey and embracing it as part of your professional journey
- Breaking the mould: How trying to “fit in” can be a disadvantage
- Learning to thrive in a system not built for you
Cherlyn Chia She/Her
Multicultural Program Lead
Ambulance Victoria
Leading as a woman of colour in a male dominated industry
- Understanding that becoming a leader does not mean changing who you are
- My leadership values of integrity, courage and empathy
- Managing challenges as a woman of colour in a male dominated industry
Aarti Joshi She/Her
Chief Information Officer
NSW Department of Customer Service
Afternoon Tea
Embedding allyship into the organisational structures
- How can the public sector build their capabilities to reflect multicultural modern Australia?
- How can allyship be a part of your organisation strategy, succession planning and talent management?
- How can this strategy be translated into recruitment, retention and talent management policies and practices?
- How can organisations create opportunities for more women of colour in decision making (i.e more diverse groups vs homogeneous groups)?
- How do perceptions of diversity that is inclusive of CALD & CARM women vary across different departments or agencies within the public sector?
- How can the responsibility of inclusion be shifted from HR to organisational leaders to build an inclusive work environment?
- What specific strategies need to be in place to reconcile potential conflicts between merit-based decisions and the need for diversity?
Paul Hubbard He/Him
A/g Deputy Head
Simplified Trade System Implementation Taskforce
Jacqueline Mayer She/Her
Director | Multicultural Affairs Branch , Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs Division
Department of Home Affairs
Michelle Lim (She/Her)
Organisational Culture & Change Lead, Deputy Chair Race and Cultural Identity Employee Resource Group (R&CI ERG), 40 under 40 Most Influential Asian Australian
Reserve Bank of Australia
Kelly McFadyen She/Her
Executive Director, Corporate Services
Parliament of NSW
Exploring the roles & the impact of employee resource groups (ERGs)
- How to establish and grow the ERGs in an organisation
- How can ERGs uplift the capabilities of allies?
- Why is leadership support crucial for the implementation of intersectional approaches, and how can it be cultivated to enhance the impact of ERGs?
- What can organisations do to take over some of the cultural load from CALD ERG Groups?
- How Can ERGs Act as Catalysts for Change?
Christina Li She/Her
Head of Governance, Strategy & External Relations Division
Museums of History NSW
Jessica Singh She/Her
Principal Project Manager | Anti-Racism Unit & Chair, Multicultural Network
Department of Communities and Justice
Leadership lessons from diverse perspectives
- What has been the biggest highlight of your leadership career to date?
- What is one piece of leadership advice you wish you could give your past self?
- What are the top three leadership tips you would give to the women in attendance?
- How does a culturally diverse leader’s ability to navigate multiple cultures enhance their effectiveness in fostering inclusivity and compassion?
Xiaoyan Lu She/Her
A/g Group Executive Director, Systems Assurance and Data Analytics Group
Australian National Audit Office
Oanh Thi Tran (She/Her)
Commissioner
Fair Work Commission
Vanessa Wong She/Her
Director, Pacific Division
Department of Defence
Closing remarks & close of Summit
Venue
QT Canberra Hotel | Canberra
1 London Cct, Canberra ACT 2601
Online
Learn from anywhere with our interactive online technology.
Pricing
Early bird savings until 8 March
+GST
Early bird pricing
Save $500
Early bird savings until 29 March
+GST
Early bird pricing
Save $300
Early bird savings until 19 April
+GST
Early bird pricing
Save $100
Standard prices after 19 April
+GST
Early bird savings until 8 March
+GST
Early bird pricing
Save $500
Early bird savings until 29 March
+GST
Early bird pricing
Save $300
Early bird savings until 19 April
+GST
Early bird pricing
Save $100
Standard prices after 19 April
+GST
Group Discounts
- Groups of 5-8 save 10%
- Groups of 9-11 save 15%
- Groups of 12+ save 20%
This is one of the only spaces in which I have felt safe to be my authentic self. The speakers were not only inspiring and empowering, the content was ‘real talk’. No fluff, no sales. I am grateful I got the opportunity to connect with so many powerful, like-minded women. This experience has been invaluable”
Senior Policy Officer
Department of Education
The summit was thought provoking, inspiring and brutally honest. I hope to share these thoughts, learnings and ideas with my colleagues – and I feel well equipped to do so. Thank you for the hard yet vital conversations that amplified and validated our feelings and voices.”
Director
Department of Home Affairs
As a white woman I am now more aware of the experiences of women of colour and what I can do to be a genuine ally.”
Principal Policy Officer
Department of Justice & Community Safety VIC
Stories are powerful, when WoC & gender diverse PoC are given the opportunities to speak truth to power. Their experiences remind us to be better, they remind us to question the status quo and they remind us that it’s all of us or nothing at all.”
Manager
Victorian Department of Family Fairness & Housing
Format