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Meet the team
The APPI team comprises public policy professionals and experts from across a wide range of disciplines.
APPI Staff
Our staff are experienced public policy professionals and experts in their fields.

Professor Libby Hackett
Libby Hackett is the inaugural CEO of the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Libby is an award-winning public policy expert with over 20 years of experience working at the highest level of government and universities. She has held senior advisory and leadership roles in government, parliament, peak bodies, think tanks and private sector consultancy in Australia and the UK. Libby was selected to participate in the Prime Minister’s leadership training programme for outstanding public servants in 2010. She was named one of the UK’s ‘Education Reformers of the Year’ by the Education Foundation for work promoting social mobility and access to higher education. She served as a Director on the UK Higher Education Commission and as an Advisor to the Browne Review of Higher Education Fees and Funding.
Libby holds a Bachelor of Arts in Politics, Philosophy and Economics, and a Master of Arts from the University of Oxford. She is an Adjunct Professor of Economics at the University of Sydney and a Visiting Fellow in global higher education policy at the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University (ANU).

Dr Ant Bagshaw
Dr Ant Bagshaw is the Deputy CEO at the Australian Public Policy Institute, leading the Institute’s Canberra office.
Dr Bagshaw joined APPI with substantial experience across a wide range of policy and strategy roles. His career includes senior positions in consulting, media, educational technology and membership organisations. Ant has professional experience across Australia and the UK, and has also worked with governments and universities across South East Asia, the Middle East and North America. His doctorate is in critical policy analysis, and he teaches a course on policy influence as Affiliated Faculty at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Higher Imagination: A future for universities and co-editor of Influencing Higher Education Policy.
Ant holds a Master of Arts from the University of Cambridge, a Doctor of Education from the University of Sheffield, and is also a graduate of Cardiff University and the UK’s Open University. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts and a Graduate member of the Australian Institute of Company Directors.

Anthony Dursi
Anthony Dursi is the Executive Director for External Affairs at the Australian Public Policy Institute. Anthony brings two decades of leadership experience in strategic communications, partnerships and strategy in government, higher education, and the private sector.
Anthony joined APPI from the United Nations, where he served as Communications Expert in the Executive Office of the Secretary-General and as Head of Communications for the Centre for Policy Research at United Nations University, the UN’s think tank. He previously worked in global media relations at Squire Patton Boggs LLP in London and Washington DC and as External Relations & Outreach Manager at the Inns of Court of England and Wales, where he launched a number of campaigns and outreach programs that have since been incorporated as best practice across the sector. He also has substantial higher education experience, having served as Head of Civic Responsibility & Senior Advisor at the Russell Group of Universities in the UK, and from working in the executive offices at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Arts (New York) and McGill University (Montreal).
Anthony is a graduate of McGill University (Great Distinction) and the London School of Economics and Political Science (Distinction). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts.

Jane Reynaud
Jane Reynaud is the Executive Director, Strategic Programs at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Jane has worked extensively across higher education, government and the private sector, driving strategic initiatives, collaborative partnerships and state-significant transformation programs focused on community impact, and economic and social prosperity. Jane joined AP from NSW Treasury where she was a senior advisor to three Secretaries, overseeing a breadth of portfolios that included skills, education and training, transport, infrastructure, regional NSW, procurement, intergovernmental relations, First Nations, and energy and climate change. She also led Treasury’s corporate planning and performance portfolio, and managed cross-sector delivery and reporting programs with the Treasurer’s and Ministerial offices, the Cabinet Office and the Premier’s Department.
Prior to this, as the Chief Operating Officer at the NUW Alliance, Jane developed and led strategic partnerships between Australian and international academic, research, industry and government bodies, delivering new collaborative initiatives that amplified opportunity, access and impact for students and partners. Jane is a skilled communicator with more than 15 years’ experience as a freelance writer specialising in the translation of complex academic and scientific material for lay audiences.
Jane is a graduate of the University of Newcastle, holds Bachelor degrees in health and in design, and has formal certifications in classical music practice and theory.

Jo Attwooll
Jo Attwooll is Director of Grants and Fellowships at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Jo joined the organisation in 2022 after a lengthy career in the UK, having been Chief of Staff / Senior Adviser to the Chief Executive at Universities UK (UUK), the representative body for 140 UK universities. Prior to this, Jo worked as a Policy Manager leading on immigration, counterterrorism, and free speech policy in universities. Before joining UUK, Jo worked at the British Medical Association leading on immigration policy and access to healthcare for refused asylum seekers.

Yvonne Lui
Yvonne Lui is the Director of Operations at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Yvonne has a passion for driving social transformation agendas and creating impactful experiences for organisations. Coming from senior manager positions at Deloitte and Westpac, she holds significant experience in both project management and transformation across financial and professional services industries. Utilising human-centred design at the core of her work, Yvonne is an expert at driving transformation in fast-paced and changing corporate environments, collaborating with, and managing the competing priorities of multi-disciplinary stakeholders at varying levels of seniority.
Yvonne holds a Bachelor of Commerce & Arts from and Masters of Development Studies from UNSW, awarded with excellence.

Jordan Ward
Jordan Ward is the Head of Economic Policy and Senior Manager at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Jordan brings deep expertise on economic, fiscal and commercial issues, with 15 years of experience working in government, the private sector and academia. Before joining APPI, Jordan worked at Te Tai Ōhanga (New Zealand Treasury), most recently as the lead Private Secretary to New Zealand’s Minister of Finance. He supported the Minister through three Wellbeing Budgets, the design of COVID economic support packages, and fiscal consolidation coming out of COVID-19. While at the Treasury, Jordan also worked on tax, welfare and employment policy. He led the 2018 Tax Working Group secretariat, and was the Treasury lead on the development of New Zealand’s COVID-19 wage subsidy.
Jordan was previously a senior associate at McKinsey & Company, based in the Australia-New Zealand and UK offices, where he worked on a range of engagements including promoting economic growth, economic response strategies to Brexit, public sector productivity, capital productivity, and corporate regulation. Outside of McKinsey, Jordan was an economic advisor to the Rio Tinto-managed Simandou iron ore project in Guinea.
Jordan has a Master’s in Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School, where he was a Knox Fellow and research assistant to Professor Reinhart on exchange rate arrangements. He also holds a Bachelor of Arts in Economics and Politics and Engineering in Chemical and Material from the University of Auckland.

Isabella Whealing
Isabella Whealing is the Head of Social Policy and Senior Manager at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Isabella is an experienced strategic policy professional with a background in digital and technology strategy consulting. Prior to joining APPI, Isabella was an Associate Director at NSW Treasury where she led National Agreement negotiations with the Commonwealth Government in the Disability Reform and Health portfolios. While at NSW Treasury, Isabella was an Executive Officer to the Deputy Secretary of Policy & Budget, where she provided strategic advice and support across a range of policy initiatives. She managed the design and implementation of many of NSW’s rapid COVID-19 response programs as a Senior Advisor, including collaborating closely with Service NSW on the policy development and implementation of key small business support grants.
Before her time in the NSW Government, Isabella worked in consulting for 6 years as a Manager at PriceWaterhouseCoopers in the Digital and Technology Strategy Division, where she worked predominantly in financial services and government. Isabella’s focus was designing the digital capabilities, processes and implementation plans to enable customer-centric service delivery.
Isabella has a Bachelor of Arts in Government and International Relations and History from the University of Sydney and a Graduate Certificate in Environment Studies from Macquarie University.

Bonnie Bley
Bonnie Bley is the Head of Energy and Environment Policy and Senior Manager at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Bonnie joined APPI with a breadth of policy and project leadership experience after a decade working across consulting, policy think tanks and not-for-profit sectors.
As a Director at the international management consultancy Nous, Bonnie worked on a range of policy challenges across the sustainable development practice to support government, private and not-for-profit clients to embed sustainability, improve environmental outcomes, and drive progress on Australia’s transition to Net Zero. Her portfolio included energy transitions, pathways for renewables, environment strategy, and environment and energy regulation.
Prior to Nous, Bonnie worked at a not-for-profit start-up that funds public interest journalism across Australia, Asia and the Pacific. Her work involved designing the inaugural strategy and impact framework, building a pipeline of impactful projects and partnership opportunities, and leading the day-to-day management of a multimillion-dollar portfolio of programs.
Bonnie began her career working at independent foreign policy think tanks in London and Sydney, including four years at the Lowy Institute, where she co-authored two flagship indices to measure diplomatic and geopolitical power.
Bonnie studied at University College London (UCL) and the University of Bologna. She has written op-eds and provided commentary for the Australian Financial Review, The Australian, Foreign Affairs, Financial Times, The Diplomat and The Interpreter.

Andreas Kaufmann
Andreas Kaufmann is Head of Communications at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Andreas is a creative communications expert and an engagement strategist. In addition to communicating research findings and policy outcomes clearly and compellingly, Andreas is also passionate about building strategic partnerships with different stakeholders. He is a creative visionary for communications, design and social media, with a global perspective.
Andreas joined APPI from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), based in Geneva, where he was Marketing Campaign Officer for the ICRC-led Centre of Competence on Humanitarian Negotiation, a multiagency partnership with UNWFP, UNHCR, Doctors without Borders and the Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue. In this role, Andreas led the development and implementation of communication strategies with a strong focus on community engagement and leveraging institutional partnerships. Previously, Andreas was a Law and Policy Outreach Associate at the ICRC, where he coordinated external communications for ICRC research and debate cycles and promoted their publications and events through creative campaigns and external engagement. Before joining the ICRC, he worked for a security policy think tank and the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. He has a Bachelor’s in International Relations from the University of Geneva and a Master’s in Political Science from the University of Zurich.

Hannah Lobb
Hannah Lobb is Policy Manager and Head of Rapid Response at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Hannah joins APPI from the NSW Ministry of Health, where she worked in the Strategy Unit leading the implementation of Future Health, the Ministry’s 10-year strategy. Prior to this, Hannah was an analyst at Te Tai Ōhanga (New Zealand Treasury), where she supported ministers on New Zealand’s COVID-19 response and health system reform, focused on improving equity and outcomes across Aotearoa New Zealand. Through these roles, she has gained broad experience operating across a range of policy areas and levels of government, as well as in system reform and strategy.
Hannah holds a Bachelor of Arts in International Studies from Kenyon College (Ohio, USA) and a Master of Public Policy from the University of Auckland.

Hugh Piper
Hugh Piper is Senior Advisor, The Policymaker, at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Hugh brings experience working across foreign and national security policy, strategic communications, and digital property markets. Before joining the Institute, Hugh held various roles at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, including as a strategic policy adviser and ministerial speechwriter. Hugh previously worked in various research and policy roles, including developing strategy for digital campaigns to counter violent extremism and leading on policy and law reform for two successful start-ups in the rental property sector.
A Sydney local, Hugh is a graduate of the University of Sydney, holding a Bachelor of Laws with first class honours, focusing on Australian constitutional law, and a Bachelor of Arts with first class honours, focusing on the history of US foreign policy. He is dedicated to effective policy analysis, research, and communications across a broad range of complex policy issues.

Lori Gunewardene
Lori Gunewardene is a Executive Officer & Project Coordinator, at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Lori has a passion and aptitude for collaborative relationship building and is known for her engaging and supportive interpersonal manner. She has extensive experience in Senior Project Coordination as well as in Senior Executive support roles. She previously worked at Nous Group as an Executive & Project Assistant, as well as a Visual Design Coordinator, where she supported multiple Principals and Directors and their projects to ensure positive outcomes for clients and stakeholders. Prior to this, Lori held a range of Project Management roles including Head of Project Management Australia, with the executive search firm Perrett Laver. Lori is currently completing a Bachelor of Food and Nutrition Science.

Lara Bate
Lara Bate is External Affairs Associate at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Lara is driven to promote and explore the intersection of digital and policy spaces to enhance policy accessibility to a broader range of stakeholders. With a background in cross-platform media management and content creation, as well as recent overseas experience in international investment spaces, her professional background complements her passion for impactful policymaking. Working to collaborate across disciplines & sectors, Lara looks forward to harnessing the dynamic nature of such rapidly changing spaces to positively transform the role of external affairs. She is also the host of The Policymaker Podcast.
Lara holds a Bachelor of Arts / Bachelor of Advanced Studies Honours majoring in Politics & International Relations and English Literature from The University of Sydney, awarded with First Class Honours.

Suzanne Hauser
Suzanne Hauser is the Events Coordinator at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Suzanne comes to APPI from a career as an arts management professional and practicing artist. She has led two arts organisations as Creative Producer of Outback Theatre for Young People and Artistic Director of Ryde Youth Theatre. Suzanne’s expertise in events delivery comes from a lifetime spent in the performing arts as a theatre maker, storyteller, dramaturg and teacher.
Suzanne’s focus has been on developing original, authentic and compelling work with and for young people and she has published plays for young actors with the Australian Script Centre and Australian Plays Transform.
Suzanne holds a Master of Research in Literature and Creative Writing from Western Sydney University, a Master of Fine Arts in Theatre from the University of Iowa, a Bachelor of Science, Theatre from Texas Woman’s University and a Bachelor of Theatre from James Cook University.

Jonty Boshier
Jonty Boshier is a Senior Policy Advisor at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Jonty joins APPI having practiced law in regional New South Wales. With experience in criminal law, family law, litigation, carbon credit licensing, employment disputes, and state planning disputes, Jonty has significant experience and sensitivity to the evolving needs of regional New South Wales. His research interests include regional economic development, public health and privacy, and regional climate policy. Prior to his legal practice, Jonty’s Honours Thesis focused on data privacy law and health information collected by wearable technologies.
Jonty holds a Bachelor of Laws (Honours First Class) and a Bachelor of Arts in Politics from Macquarie University, a Graduate Diploma of Legal Practice from the College of Law and is an admitted Solicitor of the Supreme Court of New South Wales.

Dr Jack Isherwood
Dr Jack Isherwood is a Senior Policy Advisor at the Australian Public Policy Institute. Since joining in 2023, he has contributed to a wide range of policy projects, ranging across artificial intelligence, child protection, and vocational education and training (VET) sector reform. Jack also plays a key role in the Institute’s Grants and Policy Futures workstreams, serving as a grants reviewer and curriculum lead.
Holding a PhD in Political and Social Thought from the Australian Catholic University, Jack’s doctoral research focused on civil discourse and civil disobedience in the liberal political tradition. Prior to his role at the Institute, Jack worked in higher education management at Western Sydney University, where he specialised in the design and delivery of short, online courses for upskilling professionals.
Jack’s core interests lie in harnessing data and emerging technologies to foster innovative and sustainable policymaking, and he has published several pieces on artificial intelligence policy and climate change adaptation in the Institute’s digital publication, The Policymaker.

Dr Gillian Smith
Dr. Gillian Smith is a Policy Associate at the Australian Public Policy Institute, joining the Institute on secondment from the University of Technology Sydney (UTS).
In her role as Social Impact Officer (Grants and Content) at the UTS Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion, she facilitates funding and grants for social impact projects and contributes to the team’s research activities. Previously, Gillian served as a Grant Development Advisor at Macquarie University’s Research Office, where she provided strategic advice to researchers on external competitive grants and managed internal funding schemes.
Gillian holds a PhD in Egyptology from Macquarie University, specializing in temple art and architecture. She has also worked as a sessional academic. Passionate about public engagement, she has designed and delivered educational and outreach programs for museums and universities and has appeared in documentary projects.

Dr Cristy Brooks
Dr Cristy Brooks is a Research Associate at the Australian Public Policy Institute, joining the Institute on secondment from Western Sydney University.
Cristy holds a doctorate from Western Sydney University, in which she focused on obesity and chronic low back pain and inflammatory mediating factors. She is an Accredited Exercise Physiologist and currently an Associate Lecturer in Interprofessional Health Science, with research interests in health and wellbeing and the translation from research to policy.
Alongside her work at APPI, Cristy supervises Honours and Higher Degree Research students and manages current research projects in food insecurity, chronic pain, obesity and diabetes, exercise, and endometriosis.

Isabella Wilson
Isabella Wilson is a Research Associate at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Isabella is currently completing her doctorate in social policy at the University of Sydney’s School of Social and Political Sciences, researching within the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies. Her research interests include a broad range of social policy issues and their relation to questions of injustice. Her previous undergraduate honours thesis analysed two Commonwealth policies that targeted Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and her current doctoral research examines the shortcomings of Early Childhood Education and Care policies for vulnerable populations in Australia.
Having spent some time in both academia and the public service, Isabella is passionate about connecting these two realms in the pursuit of producing informed public policy solutions to improve societal outcomes.
APPI Fellows
Policy Fellows come from academia, the public service, and civil society to undertake specific policy projects.

Dr Sarah Duffy
Sarah Duffy is currently working as a Research Fellow part-time with the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Dr Sarah Duffy is a Senior Lecturer at Western Sydney University who researches gender equity in institutional contexts. She is a qualitative researcher whose work focuses on the intersection between policy, practice and lived experience.
Her key ongoing research projects relate to how fathers juggle work and parenting, how parents negotiate return to work after parental leave.
At APPI, she is conducting research to inform federal policy on paid paternal leave and on supporting fathers to share parenting and earnings.

Dr Archie Thomas
Dr Archie Thomas is currently working as a Research Fellow part-time with the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Dr Archie Thomas is an award-winning researcher and educator whose work has focused on how institutions such as schools and the media can change to better service the needs of historically marginalised groups. As a Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Technology Sydney, Archie is investigating the emergence of a school-to-prison pipeline in Australian schools, as well as projects on Indigenous self-determination in education, LGBTIQ+ inclusion in education, and diversity and inclusion of Indigenous and LGBTIQ+ people and perspectives in media.
Archie has collaborated with community organisations and government departments including Aboriginal Affairs NSW, the Australian Human Rights Commission and the National Indigenous Youth Education Coalition (NIYEC) on projects focused on policy change and social impact. Archie is a transgender man and uses he/him or they/them pronouns.
At APPI, he is conducting policy research on new approaches to addressing the school-to-prison nexus in NSW.

Associate Professor Amanda Tattersall
Amanda Tattersall is currently working a a Research Fellow part-time with the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Amanda Tattersall is an Associate Professor in urban geography in the Faculty of Science at the University of Sydney. She is recognised for her role in civil society, co-founding GetUp! and bringing US-style community organising to Australia founding the Sydney Alliance. She is now a leading community-led researcher at the University, helping to build a centre supporting community-led research methods and is the Academic Chair of the community-led climate transition project Real Deal for Australia project. She is also host of the ChangeMakers Podcast, which is now in its eighth season and has over 1.8 million downloads.
At APPI, she is conducting policy research on co-creating policy with communities: a practice guide for policymakers.

Samara Hand
Samara Hand is currently working as a Research Fellow part-time with the Australian Public Policy Institute.
A Worimi/Biripi scholar born on Awabakal Country, she is a PhD candidate in Law at the University of New South Wales, focusing on the challenges of realising Indigenous Peoples’ right to education within the context of histories of assimilative schooling. At APPI, she is conducting policy research on new approaches to addressing the school-to-prison nexus in NSW.
She is a visiting scholar at the University of Manitoba and is also a co-founder of the National Indigenous Youth Education Coalition, an Indigenous organisation dedicated to backing the voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people to reclaim their rights in education, where she leads the School Exclusion Project.

Jodie Brabin
Jodie Brabin is a Policy Fellow (Academic Stream) at the Australian Public Policy Institute.
Jodie is Head of Discipline for Health Management & Leadership at the School of Nursing, Paramedicine, and Health Sciences at Charles Sturt University. Prior to joining the university, she worked as a health consultant in Australia and the Pacific region, focusing on health management, workforce sustainability, and innovation and redesign projects. She has previously worked in policy and performance within the NSW Ministry of Health and supported major corporate IT system adoption at eHealth NSW. Her interests span equitable healthcare access across vulnerable population groups in the Australia-Pacific region, emphasising healthcare as a fundamental human right.
As an APPI Policy Fellow, she is working on a project focused on male participation and attrition in clinical nursing within NSW public health.