The Australian Women's Weekly

WOMEN OF THE FUTURE AWARDS: as the 2020 search begins, we catch up with past winners

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Now in its eighth year, The Weekly’s Women of the Future Awards champion the achievemen­ts of Australia’s most brilliant young female innovators. The opportunit­ies the awards present can change their lives, and those of countless others, forever. As we launch into the 2020 Awards, with an exciting new sponsor, we catch up with some of the most extraordin­ary women we have met along the way.

Since the inaugural Women of the Future Awards in 2013, many young entreprene­urs, social change-makers and leaders who impressed our judges have gone on to achieve world-class success. From shaking up whole industries – particular­ly the male-dominated world of technology – to making real difference­s in the day-to-day lives of disadvanta­ged children, the Women of the Future alumni are a group of Australian­s that make us proud.

Annabelle Chauncy OAM, now

34, who won the people’s choice prize in 2014, has gone on to enact real change on a grand scale in Uganda with her not for profit organisati­on, School for Life. One of the first students to enrol was a girl named Sissy.

“I remember having a conversati­on with Sissy’s mum,” Annabelle says. “She said, I just want her to have a primary school education and then

I’m okay with her going off and getting married because she’ll have basic literacy skills.”

Now Sissy is doing her Year 9 equivalent in high school and is learning with confidence.

“The change in a girl who started in primary school and was not able to look you in the eye because she was so timid and afraid is incredible,” Annabelle says.

In its first year, School for Life had 80 students. It now educates 1025 young people and provides other support, such as vocational training and counsellin­g services.

Reflecting on Annabelle’s work, it’s easy to fall under the impression everything she achieved was a fait accompli. But like so many of

The Weekly’s Women of the Future alumni, Annabelle was once a young student fighting to be taken seriously and to prove that one person can

make a difference. “At the age of 21, knocking on doors and asking for people to invest in a school in Uganda while I had half a law degree was tricky,” she says. “There were quite a lot of nay-sayers who questioned whether we’d be able to pull something like this off.”

Like Annabelle, many of the past Women of the Future winners now head vibrant organisati­ons doing world-changing work. They are not afraid to tackle complex and systemic problems.

Fifteen minutes into The Weekly’s catch-up with last year’s Women of the Future winner in the Entreprene­ur and Business category, Courtney Holm, she’s giving a detailed lesson on bio-chemical recycling. She speaks with expertise and passion about the many different ways the fashion industry can change the practices that make it one of the most polluting industries in the world.

“Recycling is important but it’s just one part of it,” says the fashion entreprene­ur.

Courtney’s label, A.BCH, acts as an example of how the fashion industry can become more sustainabl­e. She is interested in the entire life of the garment, and strives to ensure everything that goes into the products is ethical and recyclable. A crucial part of her enterprise involves thinking creatively about the nature of the materials that make fashion so wasteful.

“We were slowly working on a world-first biodegrada­ble stretch material … so instead of taking

100 years to break down, [it will take] 12 years,” Courtney explains. “We were blending that with Tencel and making our own knitwear.”

Like so many businesses, COVID-19 disrupted Courtney’s plans for 2020. A lot of her research has paused, but she has been busy making masks, which she has given away to people in the community who needed them. She has had to refocus slightly to survive this past year, but she’s still passionate about the research her enterprise does. In this way, she is like so many of the impressive

Women of the Future alumni.

Marita Cheng, for example, was raised in housing commission accommodat­ion in Cairns and now operates her own tech company out of San Francisco. Macinley Butson created an elegant solution to protect women with breast cancer from radiation. And Sarah Moran’s organisati­on, Girl Geek Academy, works to level the playing field in tech, so that women are just as involved and influentia­l as men.

Shortly after Madeleine Buchner’s youth carer support organisati­on, Little Dreamers, won the Women of the Future Community, Health and Charity category last year, she was awarded a federal tender to support young carers in NSW and Queensland. The organisati­on has since grown from a team of six to 33. “The numbers of applicatio­ns through to our programs have gone up by 10 times,” Madeleine says.

Little Dreamers provides respite and support for young people who care for a family member affected by illness, disability or addiction.

The very first Women of the Future winner, Susanna Matters, was awarded the prize for her work to combat period poverty. After travelling to Kenya and learning first-hand how disruptive periods can be when girls and young women don’t have access to pads and tampons, she decided to start Goods for Girls, which taught young women how to sew their own reusable pads.

For that reason, there’s a wonderful circularit­y with The Weekly’s new partner this year, Veeda, which sells organic period products and has a foundation that works to end period

poverty all over the world. So far it has donated more than 3.1 million products in 10 countries.

Chief Executive Officer Adrian Forsyth says that, from its very beginning, Veeda wanted to ensure that its mission of creating ecofriendl­y fem-care products was extended to all women, including those living in period poverty, which, in Australia, equates to about one million women and girls.

“The impact of period poverty, particular­ly in young women, is far reaching,” says Adrian. “If a girl misses a week of school each month due to the stigma and physical necessity of not having access to suitable sanitary products, her education is compromise­d, thus impacting her future. As period poverty is a solvable issue, we want to bring it firmly onto the public agenda. Having access to period products should be a standard right for all women.”

As previous Women of the Future winners have proved, this worthy goal is not out of reach.

Today, Annabelle Chauncy has made lasting change in the lives of more than 1000 young people, and her organisati­on is proof of the power of a dream.

“It’s been phenomenal to see the change in their growth; the fact they’re now young adults and they’ve got dreams and aspiration­s,” she says. “We’re helping to ensure they’re able to reach their full potential.” AWW

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? From top: Panellists Anna Bligh, Annabel Crabb, Amanda Keller and Prof Kerryn Phelps; Maggie Beer; winners Courtney Holm, Madeleine Buchner and Macinley Butson; guests enjoying the lively discussion.
From top: Panellists Anna Bligh, Annabel Crabb, Amanda Keller and Prof Kerryn Phelps; Maggie Beer; winners Courtney Holm, Madeleine Buchner and Macinley Butson; guests enjoying the lively discussion.
 ??  ?? Annabelle Chauncy School for Life WINNER 2014
Annabelle Chauncy School for Life WINNER 2014
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Marita Cheng
Robotics engineer
WINNER 2015
Marita Cheng Robotics engineer WINNER 2015
 ??  ?? Entreprene­ur & Business
WINNER 2019 Courtney Holm
Entreprene­ur & Business WINNER 2019 Courtney Holm
 ??  ?? Community, Health and Charity
WINNER 2019 Madeleine Buchner
Community, Health and Charity WINNER 2019 Madeleine Buchner
 ??  ?? Goods for Girls
WINNER 2013 Susanna Matters
Goods for Girls WINNER 2013 Susanna Matters
 ??  ??

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