Yassmin Abdel-Magied is a Sudanese-born Australian writer,
broadcaster and award-winning social advocate with a background in
mechanical engineering.
Yassmin founded her first organization, Youth Without Borders, at
the age of sixteen, published her debut memoir, Yassmin's Story,
with Penguin Random House Australia at age twenty-four, and in 2019
followed up with her first fiction book for young readers, You Must
Be Layla, which she is adapting for screen. She was also selected
for the 2020 Soho Theatre Writers' Lab in London, as well as for
the prestigious 2021 Australia Council Keesing Studio Writers
Residency in Paris.
An advocate for the empowerment of women, youth and people of
colour, Yassmin has been awarded numerous awards for her advocacy,
including the 2018 Young Voltaire Award for Free Speech. Yassmin
has travelled to over twenty countries speaking to governments,
NGOs and multinational companies on a range of topics including
unconscious bias, resilience and inclusive leadership. Her TED
talk, 'What does my headscarf mean to you?', has been viewed over
two million times and was chosen as one of TED's top ten ideas of
2015. Yassmin's critically acclaimed essays have been published in
numerous anthologies, including the Griffith Review, the
bestselling It's Not About the Burqa and New Daughters of Africa.
Her words can also be found in publications like the Guardian, Teen
Vogue, The New York Times, The Independent and Glamour.
Yassmin's broadcasting portfolio is diverse: she presented the
national TV show Australia Wide, a podcast on becoming an F1 driver
and created Hijabistas, a series looking at the modest fashion
scene in Australia. Yassmin is a regular contributor to the BBC, Al
Jazeera, TRT and Monocle 24, and has co-hosted The Guilty
Feminist.
Outside advocacy, she worked as an engineer on oil and gas rigs for
four years and is an internationally accredited F1 journalist.
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