Growing up in a “family of teachers” in Adelaide, social justice was at the dinner table for Dr Hannah Tonkin, the first New South Wales Women’s Safety Commissioner.
“Most of my family members are school teachers in the public system,” she told Mamamia. “Both my parents and many, many other family members.
“My grandmother was also extremely active in various areas of social justice, including in a local women’s shelter, and I would talk a lot about these issues with her.”
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It was these conversations at home that inspired Dr Tonkin’s unbridled passion for helping others.
“Certainly in terms of values and understanding disadvantage, that was something we talked about from a young age,” she said. “My family has always been very focused on social justice and equality, and I guess that's what motivated me going forward.”
A passion for driving ‘meaningful change’
Since graduating from the University of Adelaide, Dr Tonkin has dedicated her career to international law and human rights, stretching all the way to the United Nations and international criminal tribunals around the world.
“I worked for many years on war crimes prosecutions, focusing in particular on crimes of sexual violence against women in Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and the former Yugoslavia.” she said. “Then from there, I went on to work for a number of years elsewhere in the UN on more general humanitarian policy and operations in ongoing conflict situations.”