Short Safety Video / Online Safety / Resources for Parents and Carers
Safe Bedrooms
Television commercial
Safe Bedrooms is a suite of resources which equips parents and carers with the tools to lock predators out.
Online grooming can happen to any child. However, 97% of Australian parents and carers hadn’t previously considered online grooming a threat.
Safe Bedrooms provides information for parents and carers on how to recognise, react and report online grooming. Through the series of videos and resources, parents and carers can learn about the warning signs of online grooming, how to protect their children and what to do if they are concerned about a child. By becoming informed, parents and carers can keep their children safe online.
Short Safety Video / Online Safety / Resources for Parents and Carers
Television commercial
Personal Safety / Online Safety / Resources for Parents and Carers / Resources for teachers
Factsheet
Short Safety Video / Resources for Parents and Carers / Resources for teachers
Interactive Resource / Resources for Parents and Carers
Personal Safety / Factsheet
Online Safety / Resources for Parents and Carers / Factsheet
Personal Safety / Resources for Parents and Carers / Resources for teachers / Factsheet
Short Safety Video / Resources for Parents and Carers / Resources for teachers
Video length 5.05min.
Camille Schloeffel is a survivor of child-on-child sexual violence. She is a social worker, activist and is currently doing a PhD in evaluating sexual violence prevention interventions.
Camille is passionate about supporting others to share their truths, building communities of care and leading collective action. In 2018, she founded The STOP Campaign, a student-led organisation addressing sexual violence at Australian universities, and has a Churchill Fellowship exploring ways activists and universities can work together to prevent sexual violence on campus.
Topic: How can we better safeguard spaces and places for young people?
This youth-led panel will explore how contextual prevention can be used to make spaces safer with and for young people.
Through lived experience and advocacy, panellists will share insights into what safety looks and feels like in the environments they move through – schools, public spaces, online platforms, and community settings.
The discussion will centre young voices in identifying the conditions that allow harm to occur and, more importantly, what needs to change.
By placing youth perspectives at the heart of safeguarding, this panel will challenge adults, organisations, and systems to listen, act, and create safer contexts.
Speakers
Chair:
Dr Jacqueline Kuruppu
Co-Chair:
Kailash
Panel:
Nooria
Jess
Darcy
Topic: Enacting the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations
This panel will reflect on the development and intent of the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations, established in response to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Panelists will examine the progress and challenges in implementing the Principles across different jurisdictions and exploring the implications of jurisdictional variation – particularly how inconsistent application affects the experiences, rights, and safety of children and young people.
The panel will discuss how we move from principle to practice, ensuring all organisations are truly child safe, everywhere in Australia.
Speakers
Chair:
Assoc. Prof. Nadine McKillop
Panel:
Leah Bromfield
Andrea de Silva
Darcy Cavanagh
Douglas Russell
Topic: Safeguarding Devices and the Internet
This panel will explore how contextual safeguarding principles can be effectively applied to protect children and young people in digital environments.
As online risks evolve, the discussion will focus on identifying key strategies that address harm across devices, platforms, and online communities, recognising the unique contexts in which young people engage online.
Panelists will also tackle the complex challenge of balancing autonomy and privacy with the imperative to safeguard. With insights from digital safety experts and policymakers, the session will consider how to create responsive, ethical approaches that protect without over-surveilling, ensuring young people are safe, empowered, and respected in online spaces.
Speakers
Chair:
Prof. Jon Rouse APM
Panel:
Colm Gannon
Nicola Henry
Sarah Napier
Joel Scanlan
Topic: Safeguarding Early Learning
This panel will examine how early learning environments can implement effective contextual safeguarding practices, with a focus on practical tools and frameworks for assessing risk and promoting child safety.
The discussion will explore how the early years sector can better identify and respond to context-specific risks, and what reforms may be needed to ensure all children are protected, regardless of the governance or ownership structure of the service.
Speakers
Chair:
Marie Stuart
Panel:
Kayelene Kerr
Tim Hawes
Sara Evans
Rosie Lang
Topic: Safeguarding Out of Home Care Settings
Chaired by Dr. Robyn Miller, this panel will explore the critical strategies and systemic approaches needed to ensure the safety and wellbeing of children and young people in out-of-home and residential care settings.
Panelists will also examine the systemic changes required to strengthen connections to culture, family, and community, and address how policy and practice must shift to prevent harm and promote healing.
The discussion will also address current challenges aimed at strengthening safeguarding frameworks and environments for kids in care based settings.
Speakers
Chair:
Dr Robyn Miller
Panel:
Cyra Fernandes
Jacynta Krakouer
Kenny Kor
Gemma McKibbon
Topic: Safeguarding Neighbourhoods
Chaired by Rowena Lawrie, this panel brings together experts to discuss safeguarding neighbourhoods for children and young people, exploring the diversity of regional, rural, and remote communities. Panellists will discuss how contextual safeguarding strategies can be adapted to address the specific challenges faced by these communities. The session will delve into place-based approaches and aims to provide examples of effective safeguarding strategies that respond to the geographic realities of diverse communities.
Speakers
Chair:
Rowena Lawrie
Panel:
Phil Doorgachurn
Carol Vale
Chloe Keel
Camille Schloeffel
Topic: Safeguarding Schools
This panel session, chaired by Professor Kerryann Walsh, delves into safeguarding within schools, focusing on contextual prevention strategies.
The discussion will explore how contextual safeguarding can be effectively integrated into school cultures to address and mitigate risks, drawing on international models and local practices.
The panel will examine the role of schools in identifying and mitigating harm from peer groups, online interactions, and community influences. This session aims to provide educators and policymakers with practical insights into fostering safer, more responsive educational settings.
Speakers
Chair: Kerryann Walsh
Panel:
Lesley-Anne Ey
Gabrielle Hunt
Smeeta Singh
Amanda Robertson
Dr Jacqueline Kuruppu is Research Fellow in the Reducing Gender-Based Violence Network at La Trobe University. She was awarded her PhD in 2024, in which she explored the response to child abuse and neglect in primary care settings. Jacqueline is currently working on the Partners in Prevention project which aims to evaluate nine sexual violence prevention programs. Jacqueline is passionate about increasing the visibility of children and young people in research so that they have a voice in improving services for their health and wellbeing.
Nadine McKillop, PhD is Associate Professor in Criminology and Justice and Co-Leader of the Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit at the University of the Sunshine Coast.
Also a psychologist, Nadine worked within criminal justice and not-for-profit organisations prior to entering academia. With two decades of research, practice and teaching expertise in criminology and psychology, Associate Professor McKillop brings with her a suite of skills in the design, facilitation, and evaluation of offending and community prevention programs. Her international research profile demonstrates expertise in understanding and preventing the onset of sexual violence and abuse, and the assessment and treatment of youth and adults who have committed sexual offences to reduce the extent and impacts of sexual violence and abuse in the community. She is the current Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Sexual Aggression: An international, interdisciplinary forum for research, theory and practice.
Deputy Director of the Griffith Criminology Institute and the Deputy Head of School (Research) in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice.
She has more than 20 years’ experience working in the US, the UK, and Australia primarily in the area of research, treatment, and prevention of child sexual abuse. She worked for the Lucy Faithfull Foundation (UK) at a residential facility for men convicted of sexual offenses. For the next 15 years she worked in Maryland, Maine, Washington, Massachusetts and California as an academic and expert witness. She has collaborated with the Massachusetts Department of Corrections, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Massachusetts Treatment Center for Sexually Dangerous Persons, and the California Sex Offender Management Board. She received a prestigious grant from the Guggenheim Foundation to fund her ground-breaking mixed methods empirical study of desistance from sexual offending (which included interviews with nearly 100 men convicted of sexual offences).
Dale Tolliday is NSW Health Senior Clinical Advisor Sexual and Violent Behaviour and Senior Clinical Advisor Children and Young People’s Sexual Safety Program (CYPSS) at the Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network, Australia.
CYPSS incorporates ‘New Street Services’ and the ‘Safe Wayz Program’ which are state-wide services in NSW for children and young people aged 0-18 years who have displayed problematic or harmful sexual behaviours. Dale is an Honorary Professor of Practice with the Faculty of the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Wollongong.
Dale’s work with people who have sexually harmed others spans over 35 years. Prior to this, Dale worked in a variety of child, adolescent and family mental health settings. Dale’s professional training is in Social Work and Law. In 2014 Dale was awarded the Order of Australia Medal in recognition of his work in this field. He has a particular interest in training and professional standards for people working with those who have sexually harmed children.
Dale is a member of the Australian Association of Social Workers and a founding member and past President of the Australia and New Zealand Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abuse (ANZATSA). Dale also consults widely with individuals and organisations regarding prevention and responding to harmful sexual behavior by children, adolescents and adults
Rosie Armstrong Lang is a Gamilaroi cultural woman from Boggabilla and grew up on Toomelah mission on the NSW/ QLD border. Dhiniwin (Emu) is her tribal totem. She’s a proud mother of three sons and one daughter. Rosie is also the CEO of culturally informed practices institute and has worked in a trauma space with victims and survivors all of her working life.
Rosie established her healing business which focuses on healing intergenerational trauma using cultural practices, that she describes as Winningali Ways. This is about decolonising healing, stripping away modernism and taking it back to culture, working with what we have worked with since time began. Rosie believes that when we “put culture at the forefront of healing, culture as the foundation will always create safe space for healing”.
Professor Leah Bromfield
Director, Australian Centre for Child Protection (ACCP), University of South Australia (UniSA
Professor Leah Bromfield is an internationally recognised and award-winning researcher and leader in the field of child abuse and neglect, child sexual abuse and issues affecting child protection systems.
She is Director for the Australian Centre for Child Protection, and the impacts of her research, support of government reform, and assistance to Inquiries and Royal Commissions has been profound with lasting national and international changes to law, policy, and practice. Leah’s achievements were recently acknowledged when she was named 2025 Australian of the Year for South Australia, and a finalist in the 2025 Australian of the Year Awards.
Andrea is the Director of Knowledge Generation, Research and Evaluation at the National Centre.
Andrea has over 25 years of experience working across diverse areas of public health, prevention, social justice and inequalities. She is skilled at researching, co-designing and evaluating solutions to complex social problems informed by lived experience, data, evidence and practice-based knowledge. Andrea has led research teams in top tier universities and previously held roles as Research Director in public sector and NFP organisations.
Phil Doorgachurn is a highly accomplished CEO, board director, and consultant, with over two decades of experience leading transformative initiatives in child safety, organisational culture, and systemic change. Passionate about safeguarding and the rights of children, Phil has dedicated his career to creating safer environments for children across diverse sectors, including sport, education, and business.
Phil’s journey is marked by a steadfast commitment to innovation and collaboration. He has worked with global organisations such as the International Olympic Committee (IOC), FIFA, and the Premier League, advising on strategies to enhance athlete welfare and safety. Notably, he pioneered the world’s first education program for welfare officers in sport and led the development of one of the English Premier League’s first wellbeing teams for elite athletes.
In Australia, Phil has been instrumental in shaping child safeguarding frameworks through roles such as CEO of YMCA Safeguarding and Advisor to the National Office for Child Safety. His leadership extends to consulting for organisations like England Cricket, Ronald McDonald House Charities, Victoria University and many more, where he has driven cultural shifts from reactive risk management to proactive safeguarding practices.
Phil is currently the Executive Director for On Us: Australian Business Coalition for Safeguarding Children, uniting Australian businesses to ensure their operations, products, and services prioritise the safety and wellbeing of children. His expertise in designing self-paced training programs, strategic frameworks, and stakeholder engagement initiatives has helped countless organisations create sustainable child-safe cultures.
Outside of his professional life, Phil remains grounded by his love for family and his cocker spaniel, Chula, who often accompanies him on beach walks and even virtual meetings. Phil’s work is driven by a deeply personal mission: to inspire systemic change and ensure every child grows up in a world where they feel safe, valued, and supported.
Associate Professor Lesley-anne Ey is a senior lecturer and researcher in Education Futures and the Australian Centre of Child protection (ACCP) at the University of South Australia.
Cyra Fernandes is a social worker and family therapist with extensive experience in working with children, young people and their families.
For the past nineteen years she has been working for the Australian Childhood Foundation both as a clinical therapist, team leader, Program Manager and has been responsible for managing the program for children and young people with harmful sexual behaviours. She co-authored an article with Dr Russell Pratt exploring the role of pornography in young people’s sexually abusive behaviour. She has also worked in the Northern Territory developing a therapeutic service for Aboriginal children and young people with Harmful Sexual Behaviour. Cyra currently works for the Centre for Excellence in Therapeutic Care and has been working in a detention facility providing therapeutic support to children and young people and their carers.
Colm Gannon is a distinguished professional with over twenty years of experience in digital safety, child protection, cybercrime investigations, and software development.
In December 2024, he assumed the role of CEO at ICMEC Australia and brought extensive expertise to the organisation.
Previously, Colm served as a Detective with An Garda Síochána (Irish National Police), Principal Advisor with the Digital Safety Directorate in New Zealand, Founder of Pathfinder Labs, and Product Manager at Rigr AI (Ireland), specialising in Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. His career spans law enforcement and private industry, focusing on leveraging technology to address online harms and promote child safety.
Colm has been instrumental in shaping policies and strategies for child protection, privacy impact assessments, ethical AI implementations, and technological process reforms. He has led national and international investigations into online child exploitation, violent extremism, and harmful online communications, collaborating with multi-disciplinary teams to combat these threats.
A skilled stakeholder manager, Colm has built strategic relationships across law enforcement, government, NGOs, academia, and private industry. He has represented New Zealand internationally, including as a subject matter expert for the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, and has trained law enforcement, prosecutors, and judges for Europol.
Colm holds an MSc in Forensic Computing and Cybercrime Investigations from University College Dublin and is an Adjunct Research Fellow at La Trobe University. He has been actively involved with ICMEC since 2010 and contributes to the Financial Coalition to Combat Child Exploitation.
Danielle has more than 20 years’ experience working in the US, the UK, and Australia primarily in the area of research, treatment, and prevention of child sexual abuse. She worked for the Lucy Faithfull Foundation (UK) at a residential facility for men convicted of sexual offenses. For the next 15 years she worked in Maryland, Maine, Washington, Massachusetts and California as an academic and expert witness.
She has collaborated with the Massachusetts Department of Corrections, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Massachusetts Treatment Center for Sexually Dangerous Persons, and the California Sex Offender Management Board. She received a prestigious grant from the Guggenheim Foundation to fund her ground-breaking mixed methods empirical study of desistance from sexual offending (which included interviews with nearly 100 men convicted of sexual offences).
Tim is the Service Manager with Violence Abuse & Neglect services Hunter. Tim has worked as a psychologist and leader across a variety of clinical and leadership roles in Public Health and NGOs for the past 26 years.
This has included various roles with Sparks, a service now part of the Safe Wayz network that has worked with children under 10 who have displayed harmful sexual behaviour and their families since 1998.
Nicola is a socio-legal scholar with over two decades of research experience in the sexual violence field.
Her research investigates the nature, prevalence and impacts of sexual violence, including legal and prevention responses in Australian and international contexts. Her current research focuses on technology-facilitated sexual violence and image-based sexual abuse.
For 30 years, he has been researching child abuse prevalence, impacts, and prevention; public health approaches to protecting children; child-safe organisational strategies; and approaches to promoting child and family welfare.
He was a Chief Investigator on the first national study of the prevalence in Australia of child abuse and neglect, and its health outcomes – the Australian Child Maltreatment Study
Gabby is a registered psychologist and is undertaking a Doctor of Philosophy as part of the Australian Child Maltreatment Study.
Gabby’s research focus is on the prevalence and prevention of child sexual abuse and sexual harassment, with a particular focus on faith-based settings. Her research and ongoing work is informed by her experience as a psychologist working with survivors of child sexual abuse as well as young people engaging in harmful sexual behaviours.
Kayelene Kerr is one of Australia’s leading specialists in body safety, online safety, digital wellbeing and pornography literacy education.
Kayelene believes protecting children from harm is a shared responsibility. She empowers parents, carers, educators and professionals with the knowledge and confidence to tackle challenging but essential conversations.
Kayelene is an Ambassador for the Valuing Children Initiative and is endorsed by the Australian eSafety Commissioner as a Trusted eSafety Provider.
Kenny brings 18 years of social work practice experience into his research.
Prior to academia, Kenny worked at New Street Service in New South Wales, providing intensive and long-term counselling to young people in out-of-home care (OOHC) who displayed harmful sexual behaviour, and therapeutic support to OOHC agencies and carers. Kenny’s research builds on this practice experience and aims to address three key challenges: (1) prevention and treatment young people’s harmful sexual behaviour; (2) development of therapeutic out-of-home care services; and (3) improvement of young people’s participation in health and social care research.
Dr Jacynta Krakouer is a Mineng Noongar women originally from southern Western Australia who lives and workds on Wurundjeri Country in Naarm.
Jacynta’s expertise centres around child protection and out-of-home care practices, policies and systems, particularly for First Nations children, young people, families and communities. She is passionate about Indigenous self-determination and Indigenous-led research in these contexts.
Jacynta currently leads a program of research relating to child protection involvement in First Nations people’s lives during pregnancy and shortly after birth.
Dr Gemma McKibbin is Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Social Work at the University of Melbourne in the Violence Against Women and Children research team.
Gemma has a background in gender studies and a PhD focused on the prevention of harmful sexual behaviour carried out by children and young people. Along with an interest in harmful sexual behaviour, Gemma’s research focuses on preventing child sexual exploitation and sexual violence in young people’s intimate relationships, as well as on adult perpetration-focused prevention.
She leads a number of child sexual abuse prevention and response action research projects, including Power to Kids with MacKillop Family Services and the Worried About Sex and Pornography Project (WASAPP) with Jesuit Social Services, as well as the Amplifying Voices of Victim-Survivors (AVA) project. Gemma specialises in trauma-informed, child-focused research interviews with vulnerable children and young people. She is passionate about supporting children and young people to have a voice to government, and is a member of the National Clinical Reference Group advising government about harmful sexual behaviour.
Dr Robyn Miller is a social worker and family therapist with over 40 years’ experience in the community sector, government and child protection.
She was a senior clinician and teacher for fourteen years at the Bouverie Family Therapy Centre, La Trobe University, and part of an innovative team working with families who had experienced trauma and sexual abuse. Robyn has practised in the public and private sectors as a therapist, clinical supervisor, consultant and lecturer and was a member of the Victorian Child Death Review Committee for ten years. From 2006-15 she provided professional leadership as the Chief Practitioner within the Department of Human Services in Victoria, and later worked as a consultant with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Robyn is currently the CEO of MacKillop Family Services, one of the largest providers of specialist services to vulnerable and disadvantaged children, young people and their families nationally.
Dr Sarah Napier is Research Manager of the Online Sexual Exploitation of Children (OSEC) Research Program at the Australian Institute of Criminology, where she conducts research into child sexual abuse material offending, live streaming of child sexual abuse and effectiveness of OSEC prevention programs.
Dr Napier holds a PhD in Criminology from the University of Sydney, which focused on OSEC offending. She has also conducted research into juvenile sexual offending, the effectiveness of public sex offender registries and sex offender treatment programs, domestic violence and drug use. Dr Napier is currently Chair of the Australian Federal Police’s Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation (ACCCE) Research Working Group.
Dr Ogilvie is a Lecturer in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Griffith University, a Research Member of the Griffith Criminology Institute and a Research Associate with the Vulnerability and Policing Futures Research Centre.
Dr Ogilvie has over 10 years experience as a practitioner delivering assessment and treatment services to young people who engaged in sexually harmful behaviours, including working alongside families and communities to prevent further harm. Drawing on his clinical experience, Dr Ogilvie’s research has centred on understanding the developmental origins of sexually harmful behaviour in youth, with this research being supported by funding from the Australian Institute of Criminology, ANROWS, Westpac Bank, and the National Centre for Action on Child Sexual Abuse. His more recent research utilises large administrative datasets to examine the interplay between offending and mental illness across the lifespan.
Amanda is an executive leader and Clinical Psychologist with over 20 years’ experience working with child abuse and trauma.
Dr Robertson is an organisational safeguarding specialist and researcher with professional experience supporting schools to manage various aspects related to child protection, safeguarding, and risk management.
Her mixed-methods doctoral project focused on adult-perpetrated sexual abuse against adolescents in Australian schools, including consideration of women’s perpetration and gender bias. It examined the nature of the problem, its antecedents, and the ensuing institutional responses to ultimately recommend a series of prevention strategies for secondary educational settings. Dr Robertson’s interests broadly encompass child sexual abuse, organisational safeguarding, and sexual offending.
Douglas is a Senior Researcher at the Institute of Child Protection Studies at Australian Catholic University, where he has worked for the past eight years.
With a background in education and psychology, and over 15 years of teaching experience across primary and tertiary settings, his work is grounded in a deep commitment to child wellbeing and safety. He is currently completing his PhD at the University of Melbourne, exploring adolescent cognitive development. Douglas led the Children and Young People’s Safety project at ICPS, which supported youth-serving organisations across Australia and internationally to use data to strengthen child safety. His research has been published in leading journals and informs policy and practice in the child abuse and safeguarding fields.
Dr Scanlan is a researcher at the University of Tasmania where he specialised in the technical and social harms of the internet, with a particular focus on child exploitation prevention, cybersecurity and machine learning.
His research involves collaborating in multiple-disciplinary teams from psychology and law, with a particular focus on harm prevention, involving work that has focused on both deterrent and therapeutic warning messages for internet users trying to access child abuse material.
With an MA in Education Policy, Smeeta is passionate about social justice and the impact of intergenerational outcomes on student transitions, engagement and achievement.
Nearing 20 years in the education sector, Smeeta has worked across a variety of roles that focus on empowering young people through education, including school improvement, teacher training and child wellbeing. Her research on widening access in Go8 and Rusell Group Universities has been published internationally.
Through senior leadership roles in the community and government sector, Smeeta has led the rollout of trauma-informed practice and systems-based change across schools, family violence and community services sectors. She brings a deep understanding of place-based implementation within national and state contexts, and experience harnessing the voice of communities and young people to inform meaningful change.
Dr Deirdre Thompson is Bravehearts’ Director of Therapeutic and Support Services (since 2014).
Deirdre holds a Doctorate of Clinical Psychology, with over 30 years of experience both in the UK and Australia in both Forensic and Community Settings. Deirdre currently provides oversight to all Bravehearts client services, including Therapeutic Counselling for children and families impacted by child sexual abuse, Turning Corners Programs for young people engaging in harmful sexual behaviours, Redress Support Services, and our National Information and Support Service.
Deirdre was instrumental in developing and implementing the Bravehearts Turning Corners Program, a program aimed at providing early intervention and response to young people engaging in or at risk of engaging in harmful sexual behaviors, which was recognised in the Australian Institute of Criminology Awards in 2021 for its innovation and contribution for early intervention and prevention program. She is a member of the National Clinical Reference Group for Children Exhibiting Harmful Sexual Behaviours, which was established as part of the National Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Child Sexual Abuse 2021 – 2030.
Carol Vale is a Dunghutti entrepreneur, businesswoman, CEO, empathetic and visionary leader, and co-founder of Murawin.
Carol’s passion, determination and commitment have driven her impressive 40-year career as a specialist in intercultural consultation, facilitation, and participatory engagement. Carol specialises in working with clients across a range of industries to enhance their organisational capacity through social research, community consultations, stakeholder engagement and evaluation services.
She provides practical tools and professional services to her clients that are culturally sensitive and outcome focused and reflect her experience (including three decades in the public sector), history and culture. Carol has worked in senior management in Aboriginal Affairs, education, housing, disabilities, and child protection.
Kerryann was the foundation early childhood teacher at Act for Kids predecessor, The Abused Child Trust through the 1990s, sparking a career long interest in child maltreatment.
Kerryann is an Adjunct Professor in Education at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) where she collaborates with research teams worldwide in generating evidence for prevention of violence against children, and strengthening workforce capacity for prevention, early intervention, and response.
Kerryann was an Academic Advisor to Australia’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (2015-2017) and led the research behind the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations. For the eSafety Commissioner, Kerryann designed the Best Practice Framework for Online Safety Education and she recently completed a project for the World Health Organisation Violence Prevention Unit on what works to prevent online violence against children. She has developed resources for recognising and responding to child sexual abuse for the Raising Children Network.
Sara Evans, National Lead for Safeguarding Children at Goodstart Early Learning, is an accomplished early years professional with a Bachelor of Education from the University of Southern Queensland and remarkable two-decade-long journey in the education and care sector.
She embarked on her career as an early childhood educator, laying the foundation for her lifelong commitment to the safety and wellbeing of children and their families. Sara’s journey has been marked by a series of pivotal roles in the early learning sector, spanning corporate care, national operations, and operations excellence. Her dedication to the safety and wellbeing of children led her to become a Universal Protective Behaviours Practitioner.
Currently, Sara oversees the implementation of National Principles for Child Safe Organisations and state-based Child Safe Standards in 653 early learning centres across Australia. Her devotion to safeguarding children goes beyond her professional role, as she is actively engaged in research on protective behaviours in early learning contexts. Sara’s core belief is that every child has the fundamental right to feel safe and be safe at all times. Her life’s work is a testament to this unwavering commitment.
Marie Stuart is the Child Safeguarding Coordinator for Goodstart Early Learning in Queensland. With a robust background in early childhood teaching and psychology, Marie furthered her education in early childhood and family therapy.
Her career in Early Childhood Intervention began in 1983, where she contributed to the Macquarie University Down Syndrome Early Intervention Research Programme as a postgraduate teacher. Marie transitioned to working in long day care centres as an inclusion worker and taught early childhood education. Her postgraduate studies in family therapy paved the way for her to work with young children as a therapist and manage a Child Protection and Domestic Violence therapy service.
Marie has also provided consultancy to early childhood programs, taught in adult education facilities, and has been a speaker at various conferences. Marie has published and contributed to the development of an international strategy for the abolition of physical and humiliating punishment. She has also been involved in the development of early childhood and parenting programs and policy in Australian offshore settings.
For the past nine years, Marie has served as the Social Inclusion Coordinator for Goodstart in Queensland, where she has been instrumental in promoting inclusive practices. Her extensive experience and dedication have now led her to her current role as the Safeguarding Coordinator, where she continues to advocate for the safety and well-being of children
Topic
Contextual Prevention – Australia
Speaker
Susan Rayment-McHugh
Topic
Contextual Prevention – UK
Speaker
Carlene Firmin
Topic
Contextual Prevention
Speaker
Chair:
Susan Rayment-McHugh
Panel:
Carlene Firmin
Daryl Higgins
Rebekah Kilpatrick
Topic
Contextual Prevention Online
Speakers
Prof. Jon Rouse APM
Panel (CS1) Promising Practice (CS2)
Topic
Safeguarding Devices and the Internet
Speakers
Name.Narrate.Navigate
Team from the UoN
SVRPU – UniSC
UoM and JSS
Topic
Facilitated Reflection and Call to Action
Speakers
Rebekah Kilpatrick
Andrea de Silva
Topic
National Clinical Framework
Speakers
Chair:
Assoc. Prof. Danielle Harris
Panel:
Prof. Dale Tolliday OAM
Amanda Paton
Deirdre Thompson
James Ogilvie
Jon dedicated 39 years to the Queensland Police Service, specialising in child protection from 1996. In 2001, he joined Task Force Argos, where he pioneered Australia’s first proactive operations against internet child sex offenders.
He led high-impact national and international investigations and trained law enforcement worldwide. In 2019, Jon joined the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation, establishing the covert online, victim identification and training teams and he chaired INTERPOL’s Covert Internet Investigations Group until 2023.
Jon received six Commissioners’ Certificates, multiple commendations and the Champion for Children Award from the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children. Named Queensland Australian of the Year, he also holds the Queensland Police Medal, National Service Medal, Exemplary Conduct Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, National Police Medal, and Australian Police Medal. He is an ambassador to Act for Kids, Bravehearts and the Carly Ryan Foundation and is on the Board of Directors for the Daniel Morcombe Foundation and is Chairman of the Board of Directors at ICMEC Australia. Currently Jon is a Professor at AiLECS Lab at Monash University and as a Professor at ChildLight Hub at the University of New South Wales.
Dr Robyn Miller is a social worker and family therapist with over 40 years’ experience in the community sector, government and child protection.
She was a senior clinician and teacher for fourteen years at the Bouverie Family Therapy Centre, La Trobe University, and part of an innovative team working with families who had experienced trauma and sexual abuse. Robyn has practised in the public and private sectors as a therapist, clinical supervisor, consultant and lecturer and was a member of the Victorian Child Death Review Committee for ten years. From 2006-15 she provided professional leadership as the Chief Practitioner within the Department of Human Services in Victoria, and later worked as a consultant with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Robyn is currently the CEO of MacKillop Family Services, one of the largest providers of specialist services to vulnerable and disadvantaged children, young people and their families nationally.
Rowena, is the Director and Founder of Yamurrah, a Collective made up of @ 30 esteemed First Nations people, culturally and professionally diverse.
The Yamurrah Collective comprises nurses, social workers, psychologists, lawyers, teachers, trauma specialists and academics, each specialising in unique fields such as professional development, therapy, project management, leadership, research and evaluation. With close to three decades of illustrious experience as a clinical social worker, Rowena’s journey is marked by a commitment to addressing complex and collective systemic trauma and injustices. Her professional background in social work, law, complemented by a profound nerdiness and studies in neuroscience, shapes her holistic approach to her work.
Currently pursuing her PhD at Sydney University, Rowena’s dedication to academia and research underscores her unwavering passion for social justice and systemic transformation. She grew up and resides on sacred Darkinjung Country, and is a descendant of Wakka Wakka and Wiradjuri nations, and her matriarchal lines extending to North Leichhardt River, Gulf of Carpentaria. As a devoted mother, daughter, sister, Aunty, cousin and friend, and enthusiast of hiking, dance, arts and theatre, Rowena finds inspiration in Country, connection and various forms of creative expressions.
Recipient of the esteemed 2023 Aboriginal Social Worker of the Year award from the Australian Association of Social Workers (AASW), Rowena’s tireless advocacy and unwavering dedication to advancing trauma-informed care and social justice exemplify her impactful contributions to the field.
Carlene has researched young people’s experiences of community and group-based violence since 2008 and has advocated for comprehensive approaches that keep them safe in public places, schools, and peer groups.
Carlene coined the term Contextual Safeguarding in 2014 to describe a vision for improving safeguarding responses to young people at risk of harm beyond their family homes. She has overseen a research program to convert this vision into a conceptual and practice framework, in order to reform safeguarding responses and policy frameworks concerned with extra-familial harm in the UK and internationally.
Carlene is co-convener of a special interest group on Social Work and Adolescents for the European Social Work Research Association; she is a Global Ashoka Fellow, a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, Associate Editor of Child Abuse Review, a member of the Ofsted Insights and Evidence (Social Care) External Reference Group, and also a member of the Churchill Fellowship Advisory Council. She has written in the national newspaper, the Guardian, since 2010, and is widely published in the area of child welfare including through four books and over 50 peer-reviewed papers, book chapters and reports.
In 2011 Carlene became the youngest black woman to receive an MBE for her seminal work on gang-affected young women in the UK.
Dr Susan Rayment-McHugh is an established national leader in sexual violence and abuse prevention. Her academic career builds on a 28-year professional history working with youth and adults who have committed sexual offences, victims of child sexual abuse, and in community level prevention.
Her scholarly work is concerned with how we can best prevent sexual violence and abuse, challenging conventional thinking and proposing alternative evidence-informed approaches to prevention policy and practice. Her conceptual contributions have championed ‘just’, contextual, place-based, and community engaged prevention models, and the importance of secondary prevention of sexual violence and abuse, with the most at-risk populations, including in remote First Nations communities. Her research and clinical practice have also focused on improving treatment for First Nations youth and adults who engage in harmful sexual behaviour.
Dr Rayment-McHugh is Co-Leader of the Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit and a Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Justice, within the School of Law and Society. She is also a member of the Indigenous and Transcultural Research Centre and a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Susan is a criminologist and registered psychologist and is Associate Editor of the UK-based Journal of Sexual Aggression. She has a PhD in Criminology and a Masters Degree in Psychology (Forensic).
Dr Rayment-McHugh’s research has been recognised through awards including the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology David Biles Correctional Research Award (2020). She has built successful collaborations with leading national and international experts in this field and has extensive government and industry networks. She is widely recognised for her expertise, receiving many requests for expert advice and consultation, and numerous speaking invitations.
Prior to moving to an academic role, Dr Rayment-McHugh held leadership positions at Griffith University’s Griffith Youth Forensic Service, focused on assessing and treating youth sentenced for serious or violent sexual offences, and at the Neighbourhoods Project, a community based contextual prevention initiative in Far North Queensland.
Dr Lara Christensen. Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Justice & Co-Leader of Sexual Violence Research & Prevention Unit, University of Sunshine Coast (UniSC)
Dr Lara Christensen is Co-Leader of the Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit (SVRPU) and a Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Justice at the University of the Sunshine Coast.
Holding a PhD in Psychology, she is an international leader in research on female-perpetrated sexual offending, with a focus on technology-facilitated sexual violence. Also, a highly regarded educator, her team has been recognised nationally for their excellence and innovation in teaching, along with other awards, including the Vice Chancellor’s Teaching Excellence Award. She is a Committee Member of the Daniel Morcombe Foundation, Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, and an Associate Editor for the Journal of Sexual Aggression.