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Freda Briggs

Freda Briggs
AO
Born Freda Akeroyd
(1930-12-01)1 December 1930
Huddersfield, England
Died 7 April 2016(2016-04-07) (aged 85)
Adelaide, South Australia
Occupation Teacher, social worker, academic, author
Known for Child protection expert
Title Emeritus professor
Spouse(s) Ken Briggs
Children 2
Awards Inaugural Australian Humanitarian Award 1998
Senior Australian of the Year 2000
Officer of the Order of Australia 2005
Academic background
Education Warwick University
Sheffield University
Academic work
Discipline Education
Sub discipline Early childhood
Child abuse and child protection
Institutions University of South Australia

Freda Briggs AO (1 December 1930 – 7 April 2016) was an Australian academic, author and child protection advocate. In 2000, she was named Senior Australian of the Year for her pioneering work in child protection.

Briggs was born Freda Akeroyd on 1 December 1930 in Huddersfield, England. She had one brother, nine years her junior. She attended Deighton Council School and Royds Hall School.

Briggs worked briefly as an office clerk at Imperial Chemical Industries before joining the London Metropolitan Police, working in child protection. She said in 2007 that she joined the police after seeing an advertisement in a local paper seeking female police recruits, noting that it offered free accommodation and food.

In 1963, Briggs started studying by correspondence, eventually completing a teacher training course at Warwick University. She worked as a teacher and social worker in Derbyshire for six years. She completed a graduate degree in education and obtained postgraduate qualifications in psychology and sociology at the University of Sheffield and became a lecturer in child development.

Briggs emigrated to Melbourne in 1975 to become Director of Early Childhood Studies at the State College of Victoria (now part of Monash University). She moved to Adelaide in 1980, where she became dean of the Institute of Early Childhood and Family Studies at the University of South Australia and established a pioneering child protection course. In 2004, the Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard, recognised her work by awarding a $10 million endowment for the provision of the National Child Protection Research Centre at the university. In 2005, she was appointed Foundation Chair of Child Development and an emeritus professor, lecturing in sociology, child protection and family studies.


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