For my latest article in Ethical Corporation on overcoming the challenges of sustainable Australian indigenous employment, Part 2 in a two-part indigenous talent series, I had the pleasure of speaking with Sean Armistead.
“Where’s your mob from?” is a question
regularly asked to Sean, the Indigenous Employment Programme Manager at Crown in Melbourne, the largest leisure
complex in Victoria. With ‘mob’ referring to one’s extended family in
Australian Aboriginal English, Sean usually responds that his mother is from an
old traditional station in South East Australia called (Potaruwutj) Padthaway.
When talking to Sean, his passion for
improving the prospects of not only his mob but the wider Australian Indigenous
community shines through and his own story led him to this. When Sean finished
school and up until the age of 26 he went from job to job. Whilst he built up a
broad skillset, he was harbouring much larger ambitions. However, Sean quickly
came to realise that there was not enough help available to connect such life
aims with jobs.
After studying law and commerce, Sean co-founded
the not-for-profit CareerTrackers,
which aims to help create career pathways for Indigenous university students
through structured internship programs. The best thing about it, says Sean, is
that it emphasises the individual and what they want to do in life.
This kind of passion is taking Sean to great places: he is currently running for election in Melbourne.
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