Akram Azimi Travels from WA
Fee Range: .Up to $5000
Akram Azimi's Biography
2013 Young Australian of the Year and keynote speaker Akram Azimi was born in war-torn Afghanistan. With no choice, and only their clothes on their backs, Akram and his family fled, leaving everything behind.
Fortunately, Akram’s family won something of a global lottery: they received a visa to Australia in 1999. With the help of his amazing high school teachers, Akram overcame his disadvantaged background and became his school’s top academic student. Soon after, he was elected head boy.
Akram went on to university where he studied law (hons), science and sociology (hons) before committing to completing his PhD.
A powerful keynote speaker, Akram Azini’s personal story of success is compelling, and filled with important messages about resilience, hope and discipline.
Over the last 10 years, Akram has taught law, human anatomy, neurobiology, sociology, epistemology, community service and writing at three universities and two high schools.
Overall, he has formally taught for 2000+ hours and mentored young people pro bono for 3000+ hours.
In 2013 Akram Azimi was named Young Australian of the Year in recognition of his community service and mentoring work.
Akram is Co-founder and director of I Am the Other (reconciliation). For more than seven years and has been a mentor of True Blue Dreaming, a rural and remote educational program.
As an End of Polio ambassador, Rotarian and grassroots advocate, Akram contributed to the government’s funding commitment of $80 million for polio eradication in 2013, and another $20 million in 2014.
Akram has published articles in Australian newspapers and policy magazines, covering a wide variety of social issues from extreme poverty, polio, philanthropy and reconciliation. He has completed a triple major at the end of 2015 (Law, Honours), Science and Sociology (Honours) at the University of Western Australia.
Akram was announced as Australia's Commonwealth National Youth Delegate (2015 - 2017).
Speaking Topics Include
The ethics and ethos of leadership
From the facts of multiculturalism and to the values of interculturalism
Education, teaching and mentoring
Extreme poverty and global health
Value from values: culturally engendering ethically justifiable values
The ethics of reconciliation (from a non-Indigenous perspective)
International refugee and displaced persons policy
Social justice and social policy: from research to ideas, from community consensus to political implementation