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Steering Committee Members

 
Daniel Tarantola

Professor of Health and Human Rights
Chair of the UNSW Initiative for Health and Human Rights - Faculty of Medicine, Law and FASS

Prof. Daniel Tarantola's career includes being instrumental in the foundation of the world-reknowned Medecins Sans Frontieres and the first doctor to be employed in the field for this organisation.

Current interests include research in Health and Human Rights policies and programmes, particularly on HIV and related diseases, emerging diseases, conflicts, population displacement, climate change and vulnerable populations.
  • 1974-1991: Worked with the World Health Organization (WHO) on large scale international health programmes.
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  • 1991-1998: Lecturer in Population and International Health, Harvard School of Public Health and Senior Associate of the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights. Daniel was a close collaborator of the late, great Jonathon Mann, a senior associate at the François-Xavier Bagnoud Centre for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University.
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  • 1998-2004: Senior Policy Adviser to the Director General, WHO, and, later, Director of the department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals.
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  • 2005: Chair of the Initiative for Health and Human Rights, a unique cross-disciplined collaboration at UNSW.
 
Daniel Tarantola
John DeWit

Director of National Centre in HIV Social Research - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Professor John de Wit joins NCHSR from Utrecht University in the Netherlands where he was Professor in Social Psychology of Health and Sexuality in the Unit of Social and Organizational Psychology.
 
John de Wit
 
Anthony Zwi

Professor, School of Public Health & Community Medicine - Faculty of Medicine


Professor Zwi has strong interests in international health and policy and seeks to enhance the interface between research and policy and practice. He has ongoing commitments to teaching and research concerning health in conflict-affected settings, and is interested in exploring and responding to the ethical, human rights, and service challenges facing communities, health workers and health systems in these settings.
Anthony Zwi
Heather Worth

A/Professor, Deputy Director of the National Centre in HIV Social Research - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

My research has been primarily in the area of HIV, gender, and sexuality, with a recent emphasis on HIV and global politics. I have also co-edited three books in the area of continental social theory. I have (with others) been awarded a total of close to $6 million in external and internal research funding over the last five years. In the last six months I have been involved in developing the international portfolio of the Centre, and, along with others, have set up social research projects in Sri Lanka, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia and East Timor. However, I am also involved in local research collaborations with sex worker, gay community and Aboriginal organisations.
 
 
Heather Worth
 
Andrea Durbach

Director Australian Human Rights Centre - Faculty of Law

Associate Professor Andrea Durbach teaches ethics, human rights and public interest litigation in the UNSW Faculty of Law and is the Director of the University's Australian Human Rights Centre. She has worked with domestic and international human rights organizations, governments, universities and the private sector on a wide range of human rights initiatives. Andrea was Director of the Public Interest Advocacy Centre (PIAC), an independent litigation and policy institute, for 13 years. In the area of health, her work has focused on public health policy research and litigation on informed consent, access to medical records, privacy and discrimination.
 
 
Andrea Durbach
 
Zac Steel

Senior Lecturer, School of Psychiatry - Faculty of Medicine

Zac Steel is a senior lecturer in the school of Psychiatry and also Acting Director, Center for Population Mental Health Research, Sydney South West Area Health Service. His research interests are in the field of Social Psychiatry, cross cultural differences in psychiatric epidemiology, refugee mental health, mental health and human rights, psychological management of psychotic disorders.
Zac Steel
 
Christine Forster

Lecturer and Australian Human Rights Centre Editor - Faculty of Law

I have been in the Faculty of Law for nine years and I teach Health and Medical Law, Torts and Feminist Jurisprudence. My primary research interests are human rights law, indigenous issues and discrimination against women. I have a particular interest in health issues as they pertain to women and indigenous Australians and the implementation of human rights conventions in response to those issues. I am an editor of the Australian Human Rights Journal and am enthusiastically involved in promoting legal education for indigenous Australian within the law school.
Christine Forster
 
Eileen Pittway

Director Centre for Refugee Research - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Eileen lectures in the area of International Social Development. Eileen has been actively involved in refugee resettlement policy, with a focus on refugee women, and the women's movement for over twenty years. Her major area of research has been into the issue of rape in conflict situations. She participates in a range of United Nations meeting at an international level and has an ongoing interest in the relationship between the United Nations and civil society, in particular in Human Rights. In 2001 she received a Human Rights award from the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission for her work with refugee women. She is currently working on a research project with refugee women in Kenya and on the Thai Burma border focusing on the notion of  "international protection" in the context of the sexual and gender based violence experienced by refugee women. She is a member of Asian Women's Human Rights Council and Co-Chair of Asia Pacific Women's Watch.
 
 
Eileen Pittway
 
Niamh Stephenson

Senior Lecturer in Social Science

School of Public Health & Community Medicine - Faculty of Medicine
Niamhs research interests include public understandings of contagion and the role and use of experience in social and political transformation.  She is a co-author (with Dimitris Papadopoulos) of Analysing Everyday Experience: Social Research and Political Change (Palgrave) and has published in the fields of social research, theoretical and critical psychology and cultural studies.
 
Niamh Stephenson
 
Catherine Spooner

Senior Research Fellow,Social Policy Research Centre - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Catherine Spooner has a disciplinary background in psychology and public health and has worked in government, not-for-profit, private and academic settings. Her main area of expertise relates to alcohol and other drug problems, particularly among youth. Dr Spooner has investigated the aetiology of drug problems, trialled innovative research methods with drug users, and conducted intervention research with the health, community, criminal justice, education and law enforcement sectors. Dr Spooner is now with the Social Policy Research Centre, continuing her research in relation to children and youth, alcohol and other drug issues, and other social issues.
 
 
Catherine Spooner
 
Gillian Moon

Lecturer - Faculty of Law

Gillian's research interests are International human rights law, with particular emphasis on economic, social and cultural rights and on human rights in the global economy and in the World Trade Organisation, The rights of Indigenous peoples.
 
Gillian Moon
Patrick Earle

Executive Director Diplomacy Training Program - Faculty of Law

The Diplomacy Training Program (DTP) is an independent NGO which seeks to advance human rights and empower civil society in the Asia Pacific region through quality education and training, and the building of skills and capacity in non-governmental organisations and for individual human rights defenders and community advocates. The DTP was founded in 1989 by HE Jose Ramos-Horta, 1996 Nobel Peace Laureate and current President of Timor-Leste. Since January 1990, the DTP has conducted an 'Annual Regional Human Rights and Peoples' Diplomacy Training Program'.
 
 
image of Patrick Earle to come
 
Eileen Baldry

Senior Lecturer School of Social Work - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Eileen has conducted research projects on keeping families with a child with a disability safely together (ARC funding in collaboration with the Spastic Centre of NSW); is collaborating on social and community development models especially in social housing; and is working with a colleague Associate Professor Sue Green on Indigenous Australians and Social Work theory and education. Her work on post-release homelessness of ex-prisoners and other social factors (funded by AHURI) indicates the vital importance of supported accommodation post-release to help prevent re-imprisonment.
 
 
 
Eileen Baldry
Ilan Katz

Professor, Director of Social Policy Research Centre - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Professor Katz has directed the SPRC since January 2005. He has had many years of policy, practice and research experience in policy and service delivery in the UK and Australia. His research experience covers a wide range of issues relating to children and families and includes child protection, youth justice, prevention and family support, children and communities, SES and child outcomes, children of parents with mental illness, comparative child welfare systems, race and ethnicity and adoption.
 
 
Ilan Katz
 
Dr John Pace

Faculty of Law

Dr John Pace is a UNSW Visiting Fellow in the Faculty of Law with over 40 years experience in international human rights law. After returning to Australia in early 2006 he joined the Board of the Diplomacy Training Program affiliated with the Faculty of Law. He is also an International Advisor to the Asia Pacific Human Rights Information Centre (Osaka), and International Advisor to the Mediterranean Journal of Human Rights (Malta).
 
 
 
 
John Pace
Richard Hugman

Head of School of Social Work - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Richard Hugman is a qualified social worker who spent over a decade in direct practice. His current research includes developing new approaches in ethics for the caring professions; also the application of new ethical theory to research undertaken with refugees (in conjunction with the Centre for Refugee Research). Richard is currently working with UNICEF Vietnam to advise the Vietnam Government on the development of professional social work. Richard is an international editorial advisor to Journal of Interprofessional Care, Social Work Education, Ethics & Social Welfare and Practice. He is a Fellow of the Australian Association of Gerontology.
 
 
 
 
Richard Hugman
Rosemary Kayess

President of Disability Studies and Research Institute - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

From 2003 to 2006 Rosemary Kayess, a human rights lawyer, was a member of the Australian delegation to the United Nations committee that negotiated the text of the international treaty that sets out the fundamental human rights of people with disability.
 
 
 
 
Rosemary Kayess
Megan Davis

Senior Lecturer and Director of Indigenous Law Centre - Faculty of Law

Megan Davis' scholarship involves critical analysis of Indigenous public law issues in particular constitutional reform and democratic theory and governance. Megan's research also includes Indigenous peoples rights in international law, in particular UN treaty body jurisprudence and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and she is also an Australian member of the International Law Association's Indigenous Rights Committee.
 
 
 
 
Megan Davis
Michael Johnson

A/Professor School of Social Science and International Studies - Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Michael Johnson is an Associate Professor and the Coordinator of the Comparative Development Program in the School of Social Science and Policy at UNSW. Michael is the coordinator of post-graduate coursework programs in policy studies at UNSW and is a member of the Faculty of Commerce and the Centre for Applied Economic Research at UNSW. Michael's research interests are the transformation of the public sector at all levels of government. His current research projects include studies of institutional reform of public sector agencies and business enterprises and the development of an appropriate transport infrastructure in Sydney.
 
 
 
 
Michael Johnson
Derrick Silove

Professor, Head of School of Psychiatry - Faculty of Medicine

Senior academic staff in the School of Psychiatry have interests in the anxiety and depressive disorders, neuropsychiatry, psychogeriatrics, child and adolescent psychiatry, psychopharmacology, schizophrenia, liaison psychiatry, post-natal disorders, community psychiatry, psycho-immunology, social psychiatry, epidemiology and psychiatry in primary practice.
 
 
 
 
Derrick Silove

Associate Deans (Research)

Andrew Byrnes

Professor in Law, Associate Dean (Research) Faculty of Law

Andrew Byrnes joined the UNSW Law Faculty as Professor of International Law in May 2005. Previously, he was Professor of Law at the Australian National University (2001-2005) and prior to that was Associate Professor of Law at the Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong, where he was Director of the Centre for Comparative and Public Law and Director of the Master of Laws in Human Rights until his departure in 2001.
 
 
 
 
Andrew Byrnes
Terry Campbell

Professor in Medicine, Associate Dean (Research) Faculty of Medicine

Terry Campbell is the Head of the Department of Medicine at St Vincent's Hospital, University of New South Wales, and Deputy Director of the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute. He is Past President of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand (2000-2), and served as the Chair of the Therapeutics Advisory Committee of the Royal Australian College of Physicians from 1996 to 2000. He has also served 10 years as a Director of the New South Wales division of the National Heart Foundation, and was the Honorary Secretary/Treasurer of the XIV World Congress of Cardiology in Sydney in 2002. He has been a member of the Pharmaceutical benefits Advisory Committee since 2001.

Professor Campbell's extensive research work has encompassed both basic laboratory research in cardiac pharmacology and clinical cardiological research. His basic research activities include cardiac electrophysiology and pharmacology, using patch-clamp methods to study individual cardiac ion channels and their modulation by drugs and structure-function relationships. His clinical research activities have been related to drug therapy for arrhythmias, heart failure and ischaemic heart disease. He has published well over 100 peer-reviewed papers in these fields. More recently, he has become heavily involved in UNSW administration as Senior Associate Dean, Faculty of Medicine.
 
 
Terry Campbell
Janet Chan

Professor and Associate Dean (Research) Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Professor Chan is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia. Her research interests include criminal justice policy and practice, sociology of organization and occupation, and the social organization of creativity. She is internationally recognized for her contributions to policing research, especially her work on policing in a multicultural society, policy culture, police training and socialization, police reform, the use of information technology in policing and the legal regulation of police discretion in juvenile justice.
 
 
 
 
Janet Chan
 

Non-government Organisations

Don Baxter

Executive Director The Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations (AFAO)

Don Baxter is the Executive Director of the Australian Federation of AIDS Organisation (AFAO), the national peak body of the HIV community response in Australia. Since 1986 Don has been involved in national leadership positions and key advisory bodies in Australia's national HIV response - both elected and Ministerially appointed.Over the last five years he has been advising APCASO and its members, along with a range of Asia Pacific regional inter-governmental bodies, on the need and mechanisms to incorporate the human rights of marginalised and most-affected communities, including people with HIV, at the centre of their HIV response if they are to be effective in both HIV prevention and treatments uptake.
 
 
 
Don Baxter

Our thankyou to...

Former IHHR Steering Committee Members
 
 
Sue Kippax

Retired Director of National Centre in HIV Social Research - FASS

Professor Kippax is a social researcher of international standing with over twenty years experience. She has an extensive track record in sexuality and illicit drug use research and, more generally, the interface between social aspects of health and illness and clinical practice. She is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. As Director of the National Centre in HIV Social Research (NCHSR) at the University of New South Wales, Professor Kippax manages a programme of research into the social aspects of the prevention and care of HIV, hepatitis C, and sexually transmissible infections (STIs). Through her research, teaching and policy advisory roles Professor Kippax has played a central role in the framing of Australia's response to these blood borne viruses and infections.
 
 
Sue Kippax
 
IHHR Steering Committee Affiliate
 
Susan Priest

Conjoint Senior Lecturer, School of Public Health and Community Medicine - Faculty of Medicine.

Susan Priest's Research Interests include mental health issues, anxiety and depression in women, pregnancy and posnatal, sexual and reproductive health issues, ART and IVF,infant mental health, primary health care approaches to early intervention by midiwves and GP's. Psychosocial assessment in health care settings.
 
Susan Priest
IHHR Steering Committee Affiliate
 
David Traynor

International Programs, The Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations (AFAO)
 
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