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Nicola Roxon

The Honourable
Nicola Roxon
Nicola Roxon Portrait 2012.jpg
Attorney-General of Australia
In office
14 December 2011 – 2 February 2013
Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Preceded by Robert McClelland
Succeeded by Mark Dreyfus
Minister for Health and Ageing
In office
3 December 2007 – 14 December 2011
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd
Julia Gillard
Preceded by Tony Abbott
Succeeded by Tanya Plibersek (Health)
Mark Butler (Mental Health and Ageing)
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Gellibrand
In office
3 October 1998 – 5 August 2013
Preceded by Ralph Willis
Succeeded by Tim Watts
Personal details
Born (1967-04-01) 1 April 1967 (age 50)
Sydney, Australia
Political party Labor Party
Spouse(s) Michael Kerrisk
Children 1 daughter
Alma mater University of Melbourne
Website Victoria University web page

Nicola Louise Roxon (born 1 April 1967), an Australian politician, was a member of the Australian House of Representatives representing the seat of Gellibrand in Victoria for the Australian Labor Party from the 1998 federal election until her retirement in August 2013. Between 2011 and 2013, Roxon was the Attorney-General of Australia. Roxon is currently an Adjunct Professor at Victoria University.

Roxon was born in Sydney, New South Wales. She is the second of three daughters and the niece of the late Australian journalist and Sydney Push member Lillian Roxon. Her paternal grandparents were Jewish and migrated from Poland to Australia in 1937. Anglicising the family name from Ropschitz to Roxon, her grandfather worked as a GP in Gympie and Brisbane, Queensland. Her mother Lesley trained as a pharmacist, while her father Jack was a microbiologist. He was a strong influence in her life and she was devastated by his death from cancer when she was 10 years old.

Roxon was educated at the Methodist Ladies' College in the suburb of Kew in Melbourne, Victoria. She studied for a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws at the University of Melbourne, winning the university medal for law. She ultimately came to the view that "governments have got a role to make sure they can help people in circumstances they can't control—either through their health failing or an accident".


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