Generation Asia | Emerging Leaders Forum 2024
VIEW EVENT DETAILSJoin Asia Society Australia’s Gen A network on 19 June for the fifth annual Generation Asia Emerging Leaders Forum in Melbourne.
This year's Forum will analyse the fresh opportunities shaping the future of Australia’s relationships in Asia, recognising the role emerging leaders will play in realising these new possibilities. The Forum will bring together over a hundred of Australia’s most Asia-engaged emerging leaders to hear from industry experts, participate in interactive geopolitical workshops, and connect with peers from across the country.
Join us to hear about how leading organisations are using technology to drive mutual growth and innovation, the role Australia can play in shaping regional energy transition, the potential of soft power to foster regional stability, and much more!
Attendees will be invited to a networking reception following the forum, providing extended opportunities for connection and collaboration.
Date: Wednesday 19th June 2024
Time: 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., followed by a networking reception from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Location: Melbourne
Registration is essential. For any enquiries, please contact [email protected]
The 2024 Generation Asia Emerging Leaders Forum is presented in partnership with Bloomberg. This forum is supported through by the Victorian Government, the Australian Government New Colombo Plan, and through the generous donation of our Chairperson, Stuart Fuller, via the Chairperson’s Fund in support of emerging Asia-engaged leaders.
Speakers
Sharon Seah, Coordinator ASEAN Studies Centre & Climate Change in Southeast Asia Programme, ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore
Ms Sharon Seah is Senior Fellow and Coordinator at the ASEAN Studies Centre and the Climate Change in Southeast Asia Programme at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute. Her research interests include ASEAN, multilateralism, the rule of law, and climate change.
Ms Seah graduated with a Master’s in Public and International Law from the University of Melbourne in 2018. She is the lead author of The State of Southeast Asia Survey Report and the Southeast Asia Climate Outlook Survey Report.
Michelle Chan, Deputy Secretary, South and Southeast Asia Group and Head of the Office of Southeast Asia, DFAT
Michelle Chan is the Deputy Secretary, South and Southeast Asia Group and Head of the Office of Southeast Asia, in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. She is Australia’s ASEAN, East Asia Summit and ASEAN Regional Forum Senior Official.
Ms Chan has extensive experience in foreign policy, diplomacy, national security and intelligence, with a focus on the Indo-Pacific region. Prior to assuming her current role, Ms Chan was the Deputy Secretary National Security and International Policy in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, and was the National Security Adviser and Senior International Adviser to the Prime Minister.
From 2016 to 2018, she was Deputy Director-General of the Office of National Assessments (ONA, now ONI), Australia’s peak intelligence assessments agency. Ms Chan’s earlier roles include ONA’s Assistant Director-General for Southeast Asia (2011–13) and DFAT’s Assistant Secretary responsible for Indonesia, ASEAN and Timor-Leste (2006–07). She served overseas as Australian Ambassador to Myanmar (2008–11), with earlier postings in Indonesia (Counsellor (Political) then Minister-Counsellor (Political/Economic), 2002–05), Vietnam and Cambodia.
Ms Chan has a Bachelor of Arts (Juris) and a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Adelaide, and a Master of Arts and a Master of Laws (International Law) from the Australian National University.
Mike Bareja, Deputy Director Cyber, Technology and Security, Australian Strategic Policy Institute
Mike is Deputy Director of ASPI’s Cyber, Technology and Security program where he works on the complex challenges at the intersection of technology, national security and public policy.
Mike has worked in cyber and tech across intelligence, policy, regulation and industry. In the public sector, he has held cyber positions in Defence Intelligence Organisation, Australian Signals Directorate, Attorney-General’s Department, and Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
Prior to ASPI, Mike worked with the cyber industry to grow Australia’s sovereign capability, and was Technical Director and Strategy lead in an Australian national security consultancy.
He also worked in counter-terrorism across Defence Intelligence Organisation and Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Prior to working in national security, Mike spent six years in social science research at the Australian Institute of Criminology, Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the Department of Health.
Mike has a Bachelor of Science (Psychology) and a Master of International Affairs (with Distinction) from the Australian National University, where he graduated first in his class and was awarded the university prize.”
Prerana Mehta, Director of Strategic Partnerships, CSIRO
Prerana was appointed Director of Strategic Partnerships in May 2023. As Division Head, Prerana leads strategic coordination of three branches - Global Growth, National and State Priorities and Research Institutions at Australia’s National Science Agency CSIRO. Her mandate is to grow the organisations national, state and global engagements to support strategic science partnerships that focus on solving complex challenges through innovation science and technology. She joined CSIRO as Head of Global in January 2022.
Prerana is on the Board of SisterWorks, a Victoria based NGO that enables migrant, refugee and asylum seeker women gain independence and learn new social and vocational skills to improve their economic outlook. She stepped in as interim CEO in September 2021to lead the organisation through a critical transformation period until early 2022.
Prerana was previously Deputy CEO and Chief of Ecosystem Development at AustCyber, Australia’s Cyber Security Growth Network, charged to promote Australian cyber capability in Australia and internationally. Prior to this role, Prerana was Minister Counsellor, Senior Trade and Investment Commissioner in Singapore, leading Austrade’s operations in promoting trade and investment opportunities from Australia to the ASEAN region.
Over the last 18 years, Prerana has developed extensive experience living and working in Asia and the Pacific region in both public and private sectors. As a consultant for DFAT in Jakarta Indonesia, with Deloitte in Papua New Guinea and with International SOS in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Prerana is a member of AICD and provides board advisory services to several start-ups. Board roles include BraveHER and the ACT Australia Indonesia Business Council.
Brendan Ma, Chief of Staff & Head of Investments, Immutable
Brendan is Chief of Staff & Head of Investments at Immutable, the world's leading technology platform to enable digital property rights with web3 technology. Brendan is responsible for fostering global relationships and strategies with international investors, partners and public / private institutions. Immutable (headquartered in Australia) creates software and technology with blockchain innovations that supports gaming developers around the world to create games and experiences on the Immutable platform. Immutable has raised over $300M USD from global investors including Temasek, Tencent and Bitkraft, and achieved #1 global market-share in web3 gaming over the last year.
Brendan started his career in politics, with a stint as an electorate officer for a NSW MP and interned with a US Senator in Washington DC. Brendan represented Australia at the Y20 Engagement Group, a sub-forum at the Group of 20 meetings in Saudi Arabia.
Prior to Immutable, Brendan was an investment banker at Goldman Sachs where he worked with Australia's largest financial institutions and technology companies to advise and structure transactions. Brendan has helped raise over $300M and advised on transactions worth over $50B for Australian companies in his career already.
Brendan is an Asia Society Gen A member and was previously a Board Member of United Nations Youth Australia and appointed to the Youth Advisory Council of the US Consulate, Sydney. Brendan holds a Bachelor of Laws with First Class Honours and a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Sydney.
Trang Nguyen, Southeast Asia Lead, Climateworks Centre
Trang Nguyen is the Southeast Asia Lead at Climateworks Centre, an independent and non-profit think tank under Monash University. She is also a non-executive Director for the Asian Australians for Climate Solutions, a non-profit organisation working to increase climate change awareness and engagement among Asian Australian communities.
Before joining Climateworks, Trang worked in both public and private sectors, including for Victoria State Government, the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), ANZ Bank and KPMG. Trang has a Master degree in Banking and Finance from the University of Nottingham in the UK.
Sophia Hamblin Wang, Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer, MCi Carbon
Sophia Hamblin Wang is Chief Operating Officer of MCi Carbon (MCi), an Australian clean technology platform transforming carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions into building materials and other valuable industrial products for the circular economy. A circular economy expert, Ms Hamblin Wang is recognised as a World Economic Forum (WEF) Young Global Leader, is a member of the Asia 21 Young Leaders Class of 2022, and is a graduate of the Harvard University Executive Education program.
In January, Sophia formally attended the 2024 WEF Annual Meeting in Davos to speak on integrity, intention and courage in carbon markets. Previously, Sophia showcased MCi's ground-breaking technology at the Australia Pavilion during COP26, where she secured 1st Place in the Net Zero Technology Centre Pitch Battle held in Glasgow. Sophia presented at the 2023 Alpbach conference in Austria with Austrian Minister for Energy Leonore Gewesseler and won the COP28 Mission Innovation Net Zero Industries Mission Female Innovator Award for Australia.
Committed to advancing global climate goals, Sophia is co-founding Director of CO2 Value Australia, is a member of the ACT Climate Change Council and a board member of the Climate Ready Initiative.
Sophia’s insights and contributions have been featured in Forbes, The New York Times, Time Magazine, The Economist, The Innovator, TEDx and the Australian Financial Review. Ms Hamblin Wang has spoken prolifically about the circular carbon economy as an official delegate at the UN Climate Action Summit in New York, WEF Annual Meeting in Davos 2020, WEF Pioneers of Change Summit 2021 and New York Times London Climate Week 2022.
Anh Mai, Executive Director of Offshore Wind Energy Victoria, Victorian Government
Anh is the Executive Director of Offshore Wind Energy Victoria (OWEV), a division within the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA). OWEV is responsible for establishing the frameworks and arrangements to drive the development of offshore wind in Victoria and enable the achievement of Victoria’s offshore wind targets. Anh's expertise is in energy policy, investment, economic regulation and strategy. Before OWEV, Anh was the Acting Deputy Secretary of the Energy Group and the Executive Director of VicGrid. She has also held various leadership roles at AusNet Services and the Australian Energy Regulator.
Anh holds a Bachelor of Economics and Bachelor of Laws (Hons) and has completed the General Management Program at Melbourne Business School.
Jon Chew, Chair of Research Committee, International Education Association of Australia
Jon Chew is one of world’s leading market analysts in international education. He was previously a Principal at Australian management consulting firm, the Nous Group, and is now Global Head of Insights and Analytics at Navitas.
Jon brings in-depth expertise on global trends in education, built on the rigorous analysis of a wide range of external and in-house datasets. His work is informed by an up-to-the-minute industry perspective, developed collaboratively with a global network of stakeholders, policy-makers and experts.
Melissa Conley Tyler FAIIA, Executive Director, Asia Pacific Development, Diplomacy & Defence Dialogue
Melissa brings a track record of decades of experience in Australian foreign policy to her role with the Asia-Pacific Development, Diplomacy & Defence Dialogue.
For 13 years she served as National Executive Director of the Australian Institute of International Affairs, an independent international policy institute established as a branchof Chatham House in 1924, with close links to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Under her leadership, the AIIA was recognised for three years running as the top think tank in Southeast Asia/Pacific and one of the top 50 think tanks worldwide in the University of Pennsylvania’s Global Go To Think Tanks Index, the only comprehensive ranking exercise. In 2017, she co-authored Think Tank Diplomacy, the first book-length discussion of the role of policy institutes in the international sphere.
She joined the University of Melbourne in 2019 as Director of Diplomacy at Asialink and then as a Research Fellow/Associate in the Asia Institute. Most recently she was a visiting fellow in Taiwan at the Ministry of Defense’s think tank – the Institute of Defense and National Security Research – funded by a Ministry of Foreign Affairs Taiwan Fellowship.
Melissa has extensive experience establishing and sustaining Australia-Asia engagement through Track II dialogues involving government officials, academics, media and business. She is a lawyer and specialist in conflict resolution, including negotiation, mediation and peace education, who worked as program manager of the University of Melbourne’s International Conflict Resolution Centre and Senior Fellow of Melbourne Law School. Melissa is a prolific commentator with expertise in Australian foreign policy, Australia’s key relationships across Asia and the practice of diplomacy.
Sarah Ramantanis, Chief Executive Officer, Young Australians in International Affairs
Sarah is an established leader across for-purpose, government and education sectors. Her current roles include CEO of Young Australians in International Affairs and Marketing and Communications Manager at the Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute, based at the University of Melbourne. She has held previous roles at the Australian Youth Affairs Coalition, General Sir John Monash Foundation and Philanthropy Australia.
Possessing an entrepreneurial mindset, she co-founded KOS Magazine, a platform that publishes stories on how everyday people positively impact their local and wider communities to create change and is a TEDx speaker. She holds a Master of Marketing from Monash University, has completed the AICD Governance NFP Directors course and was recognised as a 2023 McKinsey & Co. Rising Young Leader. With a passion for empowering the next generation of changemakers, Sarah’s goal is to become an impactful leader in international affairs to create sustainable change for youth across the globe.
Stuart Fuller, Global Head of Legal Services, KPMG & Chairperson, Asia Society Australia
Stuart is Global Head of Legal Services for KPMG International and is also its Asia Pacific Regional Leader for Legal Services. In those roles, he leads a team of more than 2,700 legal professionals across 80 jurisdictions in KPMG’s global legal services network.
Prior to joining KPMG in March 2018, Stuart was the inaugural Global Managing Partner of King & Wood Mallesons, based in Hong Kong, having led the combination of those law firms in 2012. Stuart was a partner at King & Wood Mallesons for 20 years, first practising as a capital markets, securisation and financial markets regulatory expert, and then holding a number of management and leadership roles across the firm and the capital markets industry in Australia.
Stuart is a member of the UNSW Law Advisory Council. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of laws degree from the University of New South Wales.
Harsh Gandhi, Enterprise Business Consultant, Bloomberg
Harsh Gandhi is a seasoned professional having led institutional business & client relations cutting across banks, corporate treasuries & asset managers. He is currently heading the banking partnerships within New Zealand and regional Australia.
In his current role, he works with clients, consulting them on driving decision & automation efficiencies around the inter-sectionality of Finance, Technology & Data. With a cross-regional experience spanning India, Australia & New Zealand markets, he is passionate about leading cultural diversity initiatives within & outside of his organization.
Georgina McKay, Asian Equities Reporter, Bloomberg News
Georgina McKay is an Asian equities reporter at Bloomberg News based in Sydney. She predominantly covers the Australian market, with a focus on banks and the nation’s vast resource sector. Georgina joined Bloomberg in 2020, and in her role, she examines how changes in international trade and geopolitics impacts listed companies, as well as sectors such as resources, agriculture and education.
She reports for Bloomberg’s terminal service, digital, TV and radio. Prior to joining Bloomberg’s newsroom she studied at the ANU graduating with a bachelor of politics, philosophy and economics and bachelor of arts, majoring in international relations.
Keira Wright, Asia Agriculture Reporter, Bloomberg
Keira Wright is a journalist for Bloomberg News based in Sydney. Throughout her career she has reported on everything from the exploitation of migrant workers to international trade disputes, her most recent coverage focusing on agriculture and climate.
She is passionate about using multimedia storytelling to shine a light on social issues, and has reported across all platforms. Before working at Bloomberg, Keira interned with ABC and Reuters in Jakarta, and completed a degree in Professional Communication at RMIT University in Melbourne.
Daniel Ha, President, Australia Korea Young Professionals Association
Daniel Ha is a dynamic leader with a passion for fostering cross-cultural connections and building awareness of the significance of the Australia-Korea relationship. Currently serving as the President of the Australia Korea Young Professionals Association (AKYPA), Daniel's journey led him to assume various leadership roles within AKYPA.
Under his leadership, AKYPA actively fosters people to people connections and professional development opportunities for early to mid career professionals with an interest in the Australia-Korea bilateral relationship. Daniel's commitment to creating a vibrant community where members can thrive both personally and professionally has resulted in a diverse range of networking events, workshops, and mentorship programs organised under his leadership. Through his innovative approach and unwavering dedication, he continues to shape AKYPA into a catalyst for meaningful connections and opportunities for young professionals in Australia and Korea.
Aster Haile, Program Manager, Asia Society Australia
Aster Haile joined Asia Society Australia in November 2022, and is based in the Melbourne office. Aster leads the Generation Asia platform, Asia Society Australia's commitment to supporting emerging leaders in Australia-Asia relations, and coordinates activities through the RMIT Asia Trade and Innovation Hub. She is involved in the delivery of all Melbourne based programs.
Aster holds a Master of Development Studies from the University of Melbourne, and a Bachelor of Arts (International Studies) from RMIT University. Aster has spent extensive time studying and working in Indonesia with the support of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, focusing on regional security issues, international development, and migration issues.
Prior to working with Asia Society Australia, Aster was a Program and Engagement Manager for the Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award, expanding the reach of the world’s leading youth development program.
Previous Gen A Forums
-
Conference
-
Conference
-
Conference