David Vadiveloo

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David Selvarajah Vadiveloo
David S Vadiveloo
Nationality Australian
Education Bachelor of Law, Bachelor of Arts, Grad. Dip. Film & Television
Alma mater Monash University, Victorian College of the Arts
Occupation Lawyer, Screen Director and Educator
Employer Community Prophets
Spouse(s) Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson
Children 2
Parent(s) Victor and Anne Vadiveloo

David Selvarajah Vadiveloo is an Australian screen director/producer, educationalist and human rights lawyer. In 2005 he was awarded the Australian Human Rights Commission Award for Individual Community Achievement and was the youngest person to be Highly Commended for the Human Rights Medal, recognising lifelong commitment and achievements in human rights.[1] In 2009, films he had written and directed were nominated for Australian Film Institute Awards in both the drama and documentary categories.

Vadiveloo is a Board member of the Institute for Cultural Diversity[2] and consultant to the Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation.[3] He is married to Inupiat filmmaker and educationalist Rachel Naninaaq Ewardson[4] and is the founder and director of the media entertainment and social justice company Community Prophets. The company facilitates socio-economic reform programs and produces and teaches film and television in partnership with marginalised communities.

Early life and education

Vadiveloo holds a Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Arts from Monash University, Melbourne, Australia and a Graduate Diploma in Film and Television from the Victorian College of the Arts at University of Melbourne, Australia.

Awards

His work in the 1990s and early 2000s in film and human rights saw him awarded the 2005 Australian Human Rights Commission Award for Individual Community Achievement for his work with Indigenous and marginalised youth.[5] In 2005 he was also the youngest person to be Highly Commended for the Human Rights Medal, recognising lifelong commitment and achievements in human rights.[1] Vadiveloo's films have received numerous nominations and awards including the 2002 Canadian Golden Sheaf Award for Best International Documentary,[6] the 2005 Australian Interactive Media Industry Association Award for Best Interactive Learning[7] and 2009 Australian Film Institute nominations in both Drama and Documentary.[8][9]

Career

Legal and Human Rights career

Vadiveloo completed his articled clerk year in 1993 at the Aboriginal Central Land Council in Alice Springs and at a local commercial firm, McBride & Stirk. He went on to work as a solicitor and barrister for several years in the Northern Territory of Australia, including work on the successful Native Title Application, Hayes v Northern Territory,[10] brought by the Arrernte people of the Alice Springs region.

In 1996, Vadiveloo was a policy advisor to the Federal Race Discrimination Commissioner of the Australian Human Rights Commission. He facilitated national community consultations with Indigenous and culturally diverse communities about the operation and effectiveness of the Australian Racial Discrimination Act. These consultations formed the basis of the 1996 State of the Nation Report,[11] delivered by the Race Discrimination Commissioner.

In 2013, Vadiveloo was acting chief executive officer of the Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation.[3] His facilitation of Indigenous education reform since 2010 in Jabiru with Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson has resulted in a close collaboration between Vadiveloo and Aboriginal historian Dr Gary Foley.

Film career

In 1998, after completing the Victorian College of the Arts Film and Television post-graduate degree, Vadiveloo returned to Alice Springs and established a media program at the Irrkerlantye Learning Centre, working with Indigenous children from the Town Camps of Alice Springs and re-engaging them with schooling through media.

Vadiveloo's documentary Trespass (2002), about the Mirrar leader Yvonne Margarula and her battle to stop the Jabiluka mine site, won multiple awards[6] and his documentary Beyond Sorry (2004) about Australia's Stolen Generations premiered on Australia's ABC Television and was a festival favourite at the 2004 Sydney Film Festival.

Vadiveloo directed and co-produced Us Mob (2005), the first Aboriginal children's television series in Australia and the first interactive Indigenous television series in the world.

In 2009, Vadiveloo was nominated for two Australian Film Institute Awards. He directed and wrote the half-hour crime drama Burn (2008), created with at-risk inner city youth, which was nominated for Best Short Fiction Film.[8] He also directed, wrote and co-produced the best documentary nominated series, Voices from the Cape (2008),[9] which followed a media program run by his company Community Prophets, in the Aboriginal community of Aurukun in Cape York, Australia. Both films received nominations for Best Director at the Australian Directors Guild Awards in 2010.[12]

Vadiveloo founded the media entertainment and social justice company Community Prophets in 2005 with the express aim of using media to empower marginalised youth and facilitate socio-economic reform programs in partnership with marginalised communities.

Vadiveloo sits on the Board of the Institute for Cultural Diversity [13] and on the International Advisory Board of the charity Global Angels.

Filmography

2002 Bush Bikes – Writer/Director/Producer[14]

2002 Jabiru 0886: Trespass- Writer/Director/co-Producer[15]

2004 Beyond Sorry – Writer/Director/Producer [16]

2005 Us Mob – Writer/Director/co-Producer [17]

2008 Voices from the Cape – Writer/Director/co-Producer [18]

2008 Burn – Writer/Director [19]

2009 The Voice of our Spirit – Editor (Dir: Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson) [20]

2012 Project Chariot – Producer/Editor (Dir: Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson) [21]

2012 Songline to Happiness – Producer (Dir: Danny Teece-Johnson) [22]

Bibliography

  • Vadiveloo, David (2007). "A time for empowerment or a new digital divide? " in da Rimini, Francesca and d/Lux/MediaArts "A Handbook for Coding Cultures" (2007)
  • Ginsburg, Faye (2006) "Rethinking the Digital Age" in Toynbee, Jason & Hesmondhalgh, David (2008) "The media and social theory" p136

References

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. [1] [5] [8] [9] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] [35] [36] [37] [38] [39] [40] [41] [42]

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  10. Hayes v Northern Territory (1999) 97 FCR 32
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  13. http://www.culturaldiversity.net.au/
  14. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0386348/
  15. http://www.roninfilms.com.au/feature/6588/jabiru-0886-trespass-from-caama-collection.html
  16. http://www.roninfilms.com.au/feature/6572/beyond-sorry-from-caama-collection.html
  17. http://www.abc.net.au/usmob/
  18. http://www.voicesfromthecape.com/
  19. http://burn-movie.com.au/
  20. http://filmcatalog.nmai.si.edu/title/2052/
  21. http://www.alaskapublic.org/2012/10/09/project-chariot-documentary-premiere/
  22. http://metroscreen.org.au/songline-to-happiness-wins-at-imaginenative-festival/
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  40. Volume 126 Federal Law Reports at 336
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External links