21 Fellows from Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand with a background in Indigenous social change have been selected for
the 2022 Atlantic Fellows for Social Equity (AFSE) program, based at the University of Melbourne in partnership with the
University of Auckland.
The new Fellows come from a range of backgrounds and sectors, including finance, education, policy, health and
environment. The cohort is majority Indigenous and includes 14 Fellows in Australia and seven in Aotearoa New Zealand.
One of seven Atlantic Fellows hubs around the world, the Melbourne hub focuses on Indigenous social equity. The other
hubs in Africa, Asia, the UK and US focus on economic, health and racial equity.
The program begins with a foundation year where Fellows develop a social change project while completing a postgraduate
qualification in social change leadership. This is followed by lifelong fellowship and membership in the global Atlantic
Fellows community.
Professor Elizabeth McKinley, Executive Director of AFSE and Professor of Indigenous Education at the Melbourne Graduate
School of Education, welcomed the new cohort.
“We are delighted to welcome another strong cohort of social change-makers from across Australia and Aotearoa New
Zealand,’’ Professor McKinley says.
“They join a growing community of Fellows who are working for better outcomes in Indigenous communities and
organisations.”
Professor Shaun Ewen, Pro Vice Chancellor (Indigenous), spoke about the change the new Fellows will deliver.
“The 2022 Fellows come together at an exceptional time in human history. As we (hopefully) emerge from the depths of the
pandemic, these Fellows will be a group of people who help create and shape our societies for years to come,’’ Professor
Ewen says.
“I look forward to watching and hearing about their achievements and influence in the coming months and years.”
The AFSE programme is led at the University of Auckland’s Faculty of Education and Social work by Associate Professors
Melinda Webber and Te Kawehau Hoskins.
“The Atlantic Fellowship for Social Equity is an excellent opportunity for community leaders and change makers to
further develop their networks, capacity and capability to effect transformational social change. We look forward to
working alongside them next year," they say.
The new Fellows are passionate about restoring Indigenous culture and knowledge, and empowering Indigenous communities
for generations to come.
“I believe speaking our languages, having access to country and practising culture is the cornerstone to our identity,
health and well-being as Indigenous people,” says Christian Lugnan, an Aboriginal Fellow who will be developing a
program to connect Goori kids to country.
“I see this fellowship connecting me with transformative individuals in a global movement to bring Indigenous knowledge
back to our communities, for us and for the generations after us,” says Holly Weir-Tikao, a Māori Fellow working on
Māori health workforce development.
Fellows will be working to develop a range of social change projects over the course of their foundation year to improve
Indigenous social equity.
“This fellowship is an opportunity for me to explore approaches towards dismantling the homophobic structural barriers
we face as First Nations sex, sexuality, and gender minority group members from within our communities,” says Dameyon
Bonson, an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Fellow, who is working to improve health, well-being and opportunities
for these groups.
This is the fourth cohort since the program started in 2018. The 2022 cohort join 49 AFSE alumni and a community of 900
Atlantic Fellows around the world, which will grow to more than 2500 fellows by 2036.
The Atlantic Fellows programs worldwide are funded by a $US660 million commitment from The Atlantic Philanthropies.
Established by American/Irish businessman Chuck Feeney, the co-founder of the Duty Free Shoppers Group, the foundation
has given away $US8 billion over the course of Mr Feeney’s lifetime, largely anonymously.
Information on the 2022 cohort of AFSE Fellows can be found at: socialequity.atlanticfellows.org/fellows.
Applications for the 2023 program will open for Indigenous and non-Indigenous applicants committed to advancing
Indigenous-led social equity in mid-2022.