Margaret Alston is Professor of Social Work at the University of Newcastle. She has undertaken a number of research projects across Australia and the Asia-Pacific region and has published widely on gender, rurality, social work and disasters. In 2025 she was recognised as being in the top 2% of social scientists in the world.Bindi Bennett (she/her) is a Gamilaraay woman, mother, and social worker and is a Professorial Research Fellow and Deputy Director Indigenous Research at Federation University living, playing and working on Jinibara lands. She is a social justice scholar, a compassionate radical and activist requesting transformational change. Her research areas are disability/neurodivergence, Remote, Rural and Regional Aboriginal wellbeing and AI in the First Nations space.Wendy Foote teaches social work and research at the University of Newcastle. She has had a long engagement with child protection as a practitioner and has worked across different areas of the system, including forensic assessments, counselling and support of families, family therapy in response to child sexual abuse, and out of home care policy. Wendy has also collaborated with sector stakeholders and contributed to policy development and advocacy for reform in NSW and Australia.David Betts is a Senior Lecturer in the Social Work program in the School of Humanities, Creative Industries, and Social Sciences at the University of Newcastle. His research interests include gerontology, queer studies, and social work practice. His research focuses on how queer spaces develop and change over time, how readers engage with queer representation within young adult literature, and how older queer adults create and develop supportive interpersonal networks.Penny Buykx is an Associate Professor in the Social Work program in the School of Humanities, Creative Industries, and Social Sciences at the University of Newcastle. She lives and works on the unceded lands of the Awabakal people. Much of Penny’s research work has involved examining barriers to equitable access to services. In addition to her research, Penny enjoys her role as an educator, teaching social work research methods and public policy.