About the Council
See also
About CHASS: Current Board (Elected 27 October, 2009)
See also: Previous Boards
Professor Linda Rosenman: President- Linda Rosenman is Deputy Vice Chancellor Research and Provost at Victoria University in Melbourne. Her academic background is in economics, social work and social policy. From 1997 to 2006, she was Executive Dean of the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences at the University of Queensland, and before that President of the University of Queensland Academic Board and Head of School of Social Work and Social Policy. Linda studied and worked in the United States, returning to Australia in 1987 from a position as Associate Dean of Arts and Sciences at the University of Missouri. Linda has served as President of the Australasian Council of Deans of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (DASSH) and of the Association for Social Work and Welfare Education. She has served on and chaired a number of Boards, Commissions and advisory councils across the education and human and community services sectors. She has a long background with CHASS since its foundation and served as Vice-president until stepping down from the CHASS Board in 2007.
Professor Sue Willis: Vice President- Professor Sue Willis is Pro Vice-Chancellor (Social Inclusion), Monash University and was until recently Dean of the Faculty of Education at Monash. Sue was past President of the Australian Council of Deans of Education (ACDE). Sue began her career in Western Australia as a secondary mathematics teacher before moving into curriculum development and then university teaching and research. Her research, curriculum and professional development work have had two foci: mathematics and numeracy, and equity and social justice in and through education. Sue has engaged extensively in consultancy and policy work and served on a number of Boards and Steering and Consultative Committees at state and national levels. Sue is currently a Director of the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership Limited (AITSL) and on the Board of the VCAA, chairing its Post Compulsory Curriculum and Assessment Committee.
Michael Crayford- Michael Crayford is the Assistant Director of Collections and Exhibitions at the Australian National Maritime Museum and is responsible for a number of key functions of the museum including research, collections, preservation, curatorial, library, design, registration, exhibitions, USA Gallery, and Indigenous programs. Other accomplishments are planning and managing major museum/heritage sites with primary responsibilities in strategic planning, exhibition development and project management, financial management, advocacy and liaison. Michael has been involved in a range of cultural activities and initiatives outside of museums including music copyright, contemporary craft, public art and community cultural development. He is a board member of AusHeritage and has been a member of numerous cultural committees over a 25 year period. Michael is committed to capacity building between university research in the humanities and research applications in cultural agencies such as museums.
Professor Stuart Cunningham- Stuart Cunningham is Director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, based at Queensland University of Technology. This centre draws on contributions across the humanities, creative arts and social sciences to help build a more dynamic and inclusive innovation system in Australia. Stuart is known for his contributions to media, communications and cultural studies and works to promote their relevance to industry practice and government policy. He is the author or editor of several books and major reports, the latest being The Media and Communications in Australia (edited with Graeme Turner) and What Price a Creative Economy? A collection of his key essays is forthcoming in 2008. He has served as a Commissioner of the Australian Film Commission, as Foundation Chair of QPIX, Queensland's Screen Development Centre, and as Treasurer of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He was elected to a Board position of CHASS in 2005 and served as President of CHASS from 2006 to 2008, and has chaired the Humanities and Creative Arts panel of the ARC's College of Experts during 2007.
Professor Meredith Edwards AM FASSA- Meredith Edwards is Emeritus Professor at the University of Canberra and a Senior Consultant for Courage Partners. She is an economist who has been a lecturer, researcher, policy analyst and administrator through her career. From 1983 to 1997, she advised on some major social policy, education and labour market issues in the Commonwealth Public Service, including in the role of Deputy Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet from 1993. She served as Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Canberra from 1997 to 2002, and set up the National Institute for Governance in 1999, of which she was Director until 2004. In 2001, Meredith published a book Social Policy, Public Policy: From Problem to Practice based on case studies she was involved in during her career in the Commonwealth Public Service. Her current major research interests are issues relating to the governance of public sector boards, the research-policy relationship, and community engagement. Meredith was a member of the Wran Committee on Higher Education Funding (1988-1989) and a member of the Australian Statistics Advisory Council (1988-90 and 1994-2001). She is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, a Fellow of the Institute of Public Administration Australia (IPAA), and was President of the Economic Society of Australia and New Zealand (ACT Branch) from 1994-1996. Meredith chaired a review of the research program of ANZSOG in 2007.
Professor Ross Homel- Professor Ross Homel is Foundation Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Griffith University, and Director of the University's Strategic Research Program in the Social and Behavioural Sciences. From 2004 till 2007 he was Director of the Key Centre for Ethics, Law, Justice and Governance at Griffith, and he also served as Head of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice between 1993 and 96 and 2002 and 2003. He was editor of the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology from 1992 to 1995, and was a part-time Commissioner of the Queensland Criminal Justice Commission from February 1994 to April 1999. In July 2003 he took on a half-time role for 12 months with the Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth, to help develop a set of national research priorities to advance the wellbeing of children and young people, and to set up a new Australian Research Council research network on behalf of the Alliance. In 2004 he was elected a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. His career focus is the theoretical analysis of crime and associated problems, and the prevention of these problems through the application of the scientific method to problem analysis and the development, implementation and evaluation of interventions. He is particularly interested in prevention projects implemented through community development methods at the local level, and is co-director of a large project in a disadvantaged area of Brisbane (the Pathways to Prevention Project).
Professor Catharine Lumby- Catharine Lumby is the Director of the Journalism and Media Research Centre (JMRC) at UNSW where she works with a team of researchers seeding and prosecuting research across public, private and community sectors. She was the founding Chair of the Media and Communications Department at the University of Sydney. Her first degrees are in Fine Arts and Law and she has worked as a contemporary art critic, curated exhibitions and served on the board of the Museum of Contemporary Art. Catharine also worked for two decades as a feature and opinion writer for a range of key Australian and international print media and is an experienced public commentator on research in the HASS sector. Catharine is the author and co-author of seven books and has been a Chief Investigator on seven ARC Grants. She has also worked extensively on applied research projects in the private and community sectors. Catharine served as a member of the Advertising Standards Board (1999-2008), is a member of the NSW Health Drug and Alcohol Advisory Board and is on the international editorial board of the International Journal of Cultural Studies. She is strongly committed to communicating the value of new humanities knowledge to the public, private and community sectors and to promoting interdisciplinary collaborations that build the research capacity of the HASS sector.
Professor Ted Snell AM- Ted Snell is Director of the Cultural Precinct for the University of Western Australia. He was previously Professor of Contemporary Art and Dean of Art at the John Curtin Gallery, Curtin University of Technology, Perth. He has chaired a number of significant Australian visual arts sector boards and councils; Artbank, Asialink Visual Arts Advisory Committee, Australian Council of University Art and Design Schools and been a Director of the National Association for the Visual Arts. He is currently chair of the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council and has been member of the Council since December 2006. Ted has curated many exhibitions and has published several books and catalogues. He has been shortlisted twice for the Western Australian Premier's Book Award. He is the Perth art reviewer for The Australian newspaper and has been a commentator on the arts for ABC radio and television. A practising visual artist since 1968, his work has been shown in solo exhibitions in Perth, Melbourne and Brisbane, and in group exhibitions throughout Australia.
Professor Faith Trent AM FACE- Faith Trent is currently Executive Dean of the Faculty of Education, Humanities, Law and Theology at Flinders University, Adelaide. She holds a Chair in Education in the field of Curriculum. She has been a member of the senior executive at Flinders since 1991. Faith was an inaugural member of the national Committee for the Advancement of University Teaching from 1992-1996 and is the immediate past President of the Australian Council of Deans of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (DASSH), a position she held from 2006-2009. She has undertaken consultancies in higher education in curriculum design and implementation, teaching and learning and multicultural education, and provided advice to the governments of Brunei, Hong Kong and Canada. Faith was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in 2003 for service to education as an academic, as a contributor in the area of educational reform, and to the community, particularly in the areas of Indigenous and Multicultural Affairs. In 2007 Faith was awarded a Fellowship of the Australian College of Educators for distinctive contributions to educational leadership at a national, state and institutional level. In 2009, Faith was approved as an AUQA auditor.