Meet our Board, a group of highly-skilled and respected people with vast experience across business, academia, health practice, non-profit leadership, politics and media.
Mark Textor
Chair
Mark was appointed a Director of FARE on 17 June 2019 and appointed the Chair of FARE on 1 October 2021.
Mark co-founded one of the world’s premier market research, campaigns, and communications consultancies – the C|T Group (formerly Crosby|Textor). Headquartered in London, with offices in Europe, the Middle East, the United States, India, Singapore, and Australia. Mark enjoys high level and trusted relationships with corporate, community and political leaders across the globe.
Mark was also a regular columnist for both the Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian Financial Review.
Prior to co-founding C|T Group, Mark was an Australasian Managing Director and one of the three founding Asia-Pacific team leaders of Wirthlin Worldwide, helping to establish offices in Singapore, Hong Kong, Canberra, and Sydney. Mark was mentored by its founder, President Ronald Reagan’s pre-eminent pollster and strategist, Dr. Richard B. Wirthlin.
Mark has also provided significant assistance to NFP’s focusing on road safety, help for the homeless and in numerous campaigns on recognising and empowering Indigenous Australians.
Associate Professor Nicholas Carah
deputy Chair
Nicholas was appointed a Director of FARE on 23 March 2018.
Nicholas’ research examines the promotional culture and advertising model of digital media platforms. His work focusses in particular on the emerging forms of alcohol marketing taking place on digital and social media platforms, and how they intersect with everyday drinking cultures and identities.
Nicholas is a Chief Investigator on the Australian Research Council Discovery Project ‘Using machine vision to explore Instagram’s everyday promotional cultures’ and the Linkage Project ‘Young Australians and the promotion of alcohol and nightlife on social media’. He is an Associate Investigator in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society where he co-leads the Australian Ad Observatory project. He is also an co-lead of the Australian Research Data Commons’ Australian Internet Observatory with six Australian universities as partners.
Nicholas is Director of the Centre for Digital Cultures and Societies in the Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences and Associate Professor in the School of Communication and Arts at The University of Queensland. He is a recipient of a UQ Award for Teaching Excellence. He has published extensively on digital media platforms, advertising and branding, digital and algorithmic cultures, and alcohol marketing.
Steve Ella
Director
Steve was appointed as a Director of FARE on 25 October 2013.
Steve is a Walbunja Aboriginal man originating from the Yuin Nation on the South Coast of NSW with his cultural links based within the La Perouse Aboriginal community.
Steve is the District Director of Nunyara Aboriginal Health Unit for the Central Coast Local Health District. Steve has a 20 year background in Aboriginal Drug and Alcohol work and was inducted into the National Indigenous Drug and Alcohol Honour Roll in 2012 at the National Indigenous Drug Alcohol conference in Fremantle. Steve was awarded the First Peoples award at the Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs (APSAD) conference in Brisbane in 2013.
Steve is a member of the NSW Aboriginal Directors and Managers Strategic Leadership Group and previously lectured at Sydney University as an Adjunct lecturer. Steve is a Board member of KARI, the largest Indigenous Out of Home care service in Australia. Steve also has co-authored a handbook for Aboriginal Alcohol and Drug Work. Steve is an Associate Investigator with the Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Health and Alcohol Research. He is past executive member of the NSW Drug and Alcohol Network Executive Committee.
Kirstie Clements
Director
Kirstie was appointed as a Director of FARE on 30 June 2015.
Kirstie is an author, journalist, speaker, and former editor in chief of Vogue Australia and former features director of Harper’s Bazaar Australia. Her memoir of three decades in fashion publishing, ‘The Vogue Factor’ (MUP) was released in 2023 was an international bestseller.
Kirstie has co-authored two reference books, In Vogue Australia: 50 Years of Australian Style, and The Australian Women’s Weekly Fashion: The First 50 Years, for the National Library of Australia.
Kirstie is currently employed as a freelance lifestyle journalist and copywriter and has published her sixth non-fiction book for Murdoch Books. She has a weekly column on the New Daily news website and is a lecturer in multi-media journalism at FBI College, Sydney.
Jackie Trad
Director
Jackie was appointed as a Director on 26 November 2021.
Jackie brings more than 30 years experience in public policy, government, campaigning, communication and engagement. Jackie is the former Deputy Premier of Queensland, Former Queensland Treasurer, and held a variety of Ministerial Portfolios, including Transport, Trade, Local Government, Infrastructure and Planning.
Jackie also held the portfolio of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships and during that time, commenced the Treaty process in Queensland, led the settlement of the historic Stolen Wages Class Action and developed the legislative recognition and protection of the ancient Torres Strait Islander child rearing practice of Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa.
Jackie has led legislative and policy reform across the public policy spectrum and particularly in economic, social and environmental areas, including the decriminalisation of abortion in Queensland and the protection of the Great Barrier Reef through the end of broad scale tree clearing and a prohibition on the dumping of dredge spoil in the marine park. She also led support for and the commencement of Queensland largest ever public transport project – Cross River Rail, and the establishment of Australia’s first publicly-owned renewable energy company, CleanCo.
Jackie also led the Queensland Government’s design of the response to the economic crisis brought on by COVID, which particularly helped and supported small businesses and workers during the pandemic to maintain operations and keep their jobs.
Jackie is proud to be supporting the work of FARE, and believes that there is so much more to do to reduce the harms caused by alcohol in our community.
Associate Professor Shalini Arunogiri
Director
Shalini was appointed a Director of FARE on 5 December 2022.
Associate Professor Shalini Arunogiri is a clinical addiction psychiatrist and researcher.
She is the Acting Executive Clinical Director of the Hamilton Centre – Victorian Statewide Centre for Addiction and Mental Health at Turning Point, and Associate Professor at Monash University. She is Chair of the RANZCP Faculty of Addiction Psychiatry, an elected board member and training officer for the International Society of Addiction Medicine, and NHMRC Emerging Leader Fellow at Monash Addiction Research Centre. She has over 60 peer reviewed publications and over $20M in research funding as a chief investigator on studies for novel treatments for substance use disorder, following completion of her PhD in methamphetamine psychosis.
Shalini is a passionate advocate for clinician-researchers in mental health and addiction and enjoys mentoring health professionals in advancing their research careers.
Professor Julia Quilter
Director
Julia was appointed a Director of FARE on 5 December 2022.
Julia is an expert on criminal law and policy responses to alcohol-related violence and sexual violence. After completing her PhD in 2000, Julia spent a decade practising criminal and public law as both a solicitor at the NSW Crown Solicitor’s Office and as a barrister at the NSW Solicitor General and Crown Advocate’s Chambers. She returned to academia in 2010 and is currently a Professor in the School of Law at the University of Wollongong.
Julia leads an Australian Research Council-funded project, ‘Intoxication Evidence in Rape Trials: A Double-Edged Sword?’, which is the first Australian multi-jurisdictional study of sexual assault trials and how evidence of intoxication is used in such trials. She has recently completed commissioned reports for the Victorian Law Reform Commission’s inquiry into ‘Improving the Response of the Justice System to Sexual Offences’, and for the NSW Department of Communities and Justice on the experiences of complainants in adult sexual offence trials in NSW. She also leads the alcohol and violence theme of a collaborative national study of ‘Violence, Risk and Safety: The Changing Face of Australian Criminal Laws’ (also funded by the Australian Research Council).
Julia is committed to research translation by engaging with the judiciary, legal profession, and government, contributing to parliamentary and law reform commission inquiries, and serving as an expert media commentator.
She is a graduate of the University of Sydney (Arts, Honours Class 1 English & University Medal, 1993), the University of New South Wales (Bachelor of Laws & the University Medal, 2000) and Monash University (Doctor of Philosophy, 2000).
Tanya was a Director of FARE from 17 May 2021 to 25 October 2024.
Ms Hosch is the Executive General Manager Inclusion and Social Policy at the Australian Football League (AFL). Ms Hosch has a long and distinguished history in Australian Indigenous policy, advocacy, and governance and is an accomplished public speaker. Before joining the AFL, as the first Indigenous person and second woman in its executive ranks in August 2016, Ms Hosch was the joint campaign director of the Recognise Movement for Constitutional Recognition. At the AFL, Ms Hosch’s portfolios include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues, gender equality, sexuality and gender diversity, culturally diverse inclusion, racism, and sexism. She is tasked with advising the AFL National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Advisory Council, the maintenance of the Respect and Responsibility Policy 2017, the AFL’s Gender Diversity Policy.
Ms Hosch is a Co-Chair of the Indigenous Advisory Group of the National Australia Bank and is a Board Director the Australian Film, Television and Radio School, Council Member of the Australian National University and was a member of the Referendum Council that led the process and final recommendation that resulted in The Uluru Statement of the Heart in May 2017. A career highlight was contributing as a consultant on the ABC drama Total Control. In October 2020, Ms Hosch was announced as the South Australian of the Year for 2021. In December 2022, she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Flinders University.
Teresa was a Director of FARE from 22 February 2017 to 31 August 2024.
Teresa is a non-executive Director, following a career in law, with more than 20 years’ experience advising governments and the private and not for profit sectors on complex business and governance issues, strategic decision making, mergers and acquisitions, financing transactions, and social infrastructure.
Teresa is formerly a partner of Ashurst Lawyers and Deloitte Australia. She was named Lawyer of the Year in 2011 by the Women Lawyers Association of Queensland.
Teresa is also a Director of Seven West Media Ltd, Shine Justice Ltd , Energy Queensland and Brighter Super. She is a member of the Gold Coast Hospital & Health Services Board and the Takeovers Panel.
Andrew was appointed as a Director of FARE on 24 May 2013 and served as the Chair of FARE from 1 July 2013 to 1 October 2021.
Andrew practices as an equity lawyer with Hall & Wilcox in Melbourne, and is recognized as one of Australia’s leading superannuation lawyers. He is Chair of Togethr Trustees Pty Ltd which acts as trustee of Equip Super and Catholic Super. They have assets under management of $27b. He is also a Director of Qualitas Securities Pty Ltd and an Industry Director of the Australian Financial Complaints Authority.
He has a long association with the philanthropic sector, and is Chair of the Sir Andrew Fairley Foundation and Deputy Chair of the Mornington Peninsula Foundation.
He sits on a number of Family Boards as an Independent Director and is the Consul General for Finland in Victoria.
Tony was a Director of FARE from 25 October 2013 to 5 December 2022.
Tony is a Fellow at the Australian Institute of International Affairs and Vice Chancellor’s Fellow at La Trobe University. He is a member of the board, the editorial board and is a foreign policy analyst for The Conversation. Tony is a former International Editor for The Australian Financial Review (AFR), Political Editor and Washington Correspondent. He has worked variously for the ABC, the Financial Times of London and The Age and Sydney Morning Herald. He has broadcast regularly on the ABC and the BBC. He has served as bureau chief for the Financial Times and Australian newspapers in Beijing, Cairo and Washington.
Tony is a dual Walkley Award winner for commentary. He is the recipient of the Lyneham Award for excellence in Press Gallery Journalism. While in the Middle East, Tony co wrote Behind the myth: Yasser Arafat and the Palestinian Revolution (W. H. Allen). He recently published The Peter Thomson Five (MUP).
Tony was convener of the C.E.W. Bean Foundation. He is a Fellow of the Australian Institute of International Affairs. He was a recipient of the Centenary of Federation Medal in 2001. In 2021 Tony was awarded an Order of Australia and became a Fellow of the Australian Institute of International Affairs.
Jono was a Director of FARE from 19 October 2011 to 30 November 2021.
Jono is the founder and managing Director of the Wellbeing Outfit, a consulting firm that helps organisations improve performance by improving the wellbeing of their people. He founded the Wellbeing Outfit after stepping down as CEO of ReachOut Australia in 2018 after 10 years in the role. Jono is also a Director of Future Generation Global and Mancave and an Executive Consultant at EY specialising in mental health.
Simone was a Director of FARE from 19 September 2018 to 30 November 2021.
Simone’s research focus is in the areas of consumer psychology and health promotion. Her work investigates methods of encouraging individuals to make behavioural changes to improve their health and wellbeing. She has been researching the factors associated with alcohol consumption for almost 25 years, with a particular focus on the socio-cultural factors influencing individuals’ decisions to drink. To date she has published more than 70 peer reviewed articles on the topic of alcohol consumption. These publications relate to various aspects of the social norms applying to alcohol consumption, alcohol marketing, and alcohol policy recommendations.
Simone’s research is cited in government strategy documents and submissions prepared by non-government organisations in their alcohol control advocacy work.
Mark Addy was appointed as a Director of FARE on 6 March 2014. Mark is the co-founder of 3TWINS a creative content marketing agency. Mark is an advertising creative director for multiple platforms including screen, web, tablet, mobile and branded entertainment.
Mark’s experience in advertising has included creating campaigns for Australian Defence Recruiting, Schweppes, Heinz, Air New Zealand, Vodafone, Nestle and Mars. Mark is one of Australia’s most awarded digital creatives, winning over 40 creative awards in 2012, including 4 Cannes Gold Lions for work on Defense Australia. Born in South Africa, Mark is now a New Zealand citizen, and resides in Sydney. Mark served on the Fundraising and Research Committees.
Professor Kate Conigrave was appointed as a Director of FARE on 19 October 2011. She is an Addiction Medicine Specialist and Public Health Physician based at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney. As well as caring for patients with alcohol or other drug problems, Professor Conigrave provides education and training for health professionals, including at the University of Sydney.
Professor Conigrave has co-edited clinical textbooks on addiction medicine and her research has been recognised by the Senior Scientist award from the Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs. Her research includes a focus on early detection and treatment for alcohol problems. Professor Conigrave has also had the opportunity to work in partnership with Aboriginal communities and agencies in urban and remote Australia on research and health promotion initiatives.
Trevor Riley was appointed a Director of FARE on 5 July 2016. Trevor studied a Bachelor of Laws at the University of Western Australia. He is an experienced solicitor who commenced practice in the Northern Territory in 1974. He was a partner of the Darwin-based firm Ward Keller (1975-1985). In 1985 he went to the independent Bar and was appointed as Queen’s Counsel in 1989.
He was appointed as a Justice of the Supreme Court in 1999, and as Chief Justice from 2010. He has previously served as Chair on the Northern Territory Parole Board (2005-2010), as President and Vice President of the Northern Territory Bar Association, and is a former councillor and Vice President of the Law Society of the Northern Territory. Trevor’s community service includes being a board member of St John Ambulance, serving as Commissioner and Deputy Commissioner of the Northern Territory Football League Disciplinary Tribunal, and officiating as the AFLNT Affiliated Leagues Commissioner. He is a former Vice President of the Marriage Guidance Council (NT) and was a Director of the NT AFL Football Development Foundation (1997-2001). He is a Professorial Fellow at Charles Darwin University, where he has been a lecturer and mentor of law students for many years. He authored the book titled The little red book of advocacy.
David Crosbie was appointed a Director of FARE on 17 October 2001. David is currently the Chief Executive Officer of the Community Council of Australia and was previously the CEO of the Mental Health Council of Australia, the national peak body for the mental health field, the CEO of Odyssey House Victoria, one of Australia’s leading alcohol and drug treatment agencies and the CEO of the Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia.
Phillipa was appointed as a Director of FARE on 4 December 2013. Phillipa is a Doctor of Applied Psychology, the General Manager, People and Culture at Cotton On Group and the Director of Bluestone Edge Pty Ltd, which is a consultancy business helping sports people and organisations thrive.
Her career has been spent providing strategic leadership to organisations and teams on culture, ethics and leadership, with Bluestone Edge focusing predominantly on elite sport. Phillipa was a Vincent Fairfax Fellow graduate (Ethics in Leadership) in 2010 through the St James Ethics Centre and is an international keynote speaker on the culture and ethics of sport. Phillipa is the Chair of the Research Committee and also serves on the Funding Development Committee.
Peter served as a Director of FARE on 27 May 2010 to 8 June 2016. During his time with the Foundation, Peter served as Chair of the Finance, Audit and Risk Committee, and on the Nominations and Remuneration Committee. He is a director of TFG International, a boutique consulting and advisory firm which specialises in the area of business strategy. Peter is a chartered accountant in private practice, providing specialist taxation advice as well as general business advice.
Prior to establishing his own business, Peter was a partner at KPMG for 25 years. In the not-for-profit sector, he is on the board of Bluearth, a foundation which promotes healthy activity as a means of preventing disease in later life resulting from sedentary living. He also sits on the boards of Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia and Indigenous Business Australia which are Commonwealth government owned entities.
Dr Tobin served as a Director of FARE from 2001 to 25 October 2013. She is currently the Director of the Plunkett Centre for Ethics at St Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney and Reader in Philosophy at Australian Catholic University. She is Honorary Ethicist at the Children’s Hospital at Westmead in Sydney, Conjoint Associate Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of New South Wales and Conjoint Associate Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Sydney.
Nadine served as a Director of FARE from 22 February 2017 to 6 September 2022.
Nadine is the Clinical Director of the Alcohol and Drug Service at St Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney, Director of the National Centre for Clinical Research in Emerging Drugs, and Conjoint Professor at the University of New South Wales Faculty of Medicine National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre.
A practicing addiction medicine physician, she is a registered medical practitioner and Fellow of the Australasian Chapter of Addiction Medicine (FAChAM), Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP). Her research focuses on building the evidence base for effective interventions for substance use disorders. She has a particular interest in public health and clinical care linkages for reducing alcohol and other drug related harm.
She has previously worked for the World Health Organization and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
Cheryl Bart served as a Director of FARE from 17 October 2001 to 30 June 2013 and Chair from March 2010 to 30 June 2013. Cheryl is a lawyer and company director who serves as a Director on the boards of the ABC, Spark Infrastructure Ltd, South Australia Power Networks, Football Federation Australia, Audio Pixel Holdings Ltd, Local Organising Committee of the Australian Asian Cup 2015, SG Fleet Ltd, and the Australian Himalayan Foundation. Cheryl is also the immediate past Chairman of ANZ Trustees, FARE, South Australian Film Corporation, the EPA and the Adelaide Film Festival.
Coralie Ober served as a Director of FARE from 13 November 2012 to 15 March 2013. Coralie is retired as a Research Fellow from University of Queensland. She is Islander by birth with Aboriginal kinships in the Deed of Grant in Trust (DOGIT) communities of Cherbourg and Palm Island. Her Torres Strait Island kinships are with the Island of Saibai in the Torres Strait and her South Sea Islander kinships are with the Islands of Vanatau.
Scott Wilson served as a Director of FARE from 17 October 2001 to 13 November 2012. Scott is the State Director of the Aboriginal Drug and Alcohol Council (SA) Inc, which is the only Indigenous organisation of its kind in Australia. In 2003, Mr Wilson was awarded the Centenary Medal for service to Indigenous substance misuse issues. Scott serves on a variety of other national and state committees.
Professor Webster served as a Director of FARE from 17 October 2001 to 19 October 2011, and Chair from 2001 to 2009. He is a consultant and Emeritus Professor of Public Health and Community Medicine of the University of New South Wales.
He is Patron of the Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia, Chair of the Australian Suicide Prevention Advisory Council, NSW Expert Advisory Committee on Alcohol and Drugs and Governing Council of The Ted Noffs Foundation.
Tim Costello served as a Director of FARE from 17 October 2001 to 19 October 2011. Tim is currently the Chief Executive Officer of World Vision Australia. Tim is one of Australia’s leading voices on social justice issues. He has taken a prominent role in national debates on issues such as gambling, urban poverty, homelessness, reconciliation and substance abuse.
Elizabeth Mosey (known as Anne) served on the Foundation’s board from 17 October 2001 to 13 October 2010. Anne has worked with remote Aboriginal communities for over 20 years in the Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia to assist them in the development of strategies concerning alcohol abuse and petrol sniffing.
Anne is currently working as a consultant providing training, resource development, and community development support to government and non-government agencies in the areas of alcohol, community night patrols and inhalant substance misuse.
Professor d’Abbs served on the Foundation’s board from 17 October 2001 to 13 October 2010. He holds a position as Professor of Substance Misuse Studies at the Menzies School of Health Research, Darwin, and adjunct appointments with James Cook University, Queensland, and the National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University of Technology, Perth.
He has conducted extensive policy related research and evaluation in the areas of alcohol problems, volatile substance misuse, and community-based interventions, particularly in Indigenous and rural/remote settings.
Dr Ngaire Brown served on the Foundation’s board from 17 October 2001 to 20 February 2006. Ngiare is currently the Medical Officer for the Australian Indigenous Doctors Association and conjoint Professorial Fellow at the University of Wollongong. Her research and clinical interests focus on early childhood and adolescent well-being. Over the past two decades she has developed extensive national and international networks in Indigenous health and social justice, including engagement with the UN system.
Professor Timothy Stockwell served as a Director of FARE from 17 October 2001 to 1 July 2004. Timothy is currently a Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Victoria in British Columbia and Director of the Centre for Addiction Research of BC. He is a psychologist who accomplished both clinical and research work in the UK before spending 16 years with Australia’s National Drug Research Institute as Deputy Director and then Director.
He studied Psychology and Philosophy at Oxford University and obtained a PhD at the Institute of Psychiatry, University of London. He was President of the international Kettil Bruun Society for Social and Epidemiological Research on Alcohol, 2005-7. He was the recipient of the prestigious international E.M. Jellinek Memorial Award for Outstanding Research on Social, Cultural and Policy Studies of Alcohol in 2013 and is a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences.
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FARE acknowledges the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the lands and waters on which we operate throughout Australia. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and recognise the continuing connection to country of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
©2024 FARE
Privacy Statement
T&C
FARE acknowledges the Traditional Owners and Custodians of the lands and waters on which we operate throughout Australia. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and recognise the continuing connection to country of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
©2024 FARE
Privacy Statement
T&C
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