David Vadiveloo

He worked on the successful Central Land Council native title application, Hayes v Northern Territory,[12] brought by the Arrernte people of the Alice Springs region.

Since 2007, Vadiveloo and wife Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson have facilitated culturally responsive practice and social justice media programs in partnership with Indigenous and marginalised youth in the Northern Territory, Queensland, Victoria, NSW and Alaska.

[18] In 2008 at the request of the Legal Aid Commission of NSW, Vadiveloo and Edwardson devised and facilitated the Burn project with marginalised youth from linguistically and culturally diverse backgrounds in inner-city Sydney.

[20] On behalf of the Corporation he drafted the landmark research agreement[21] used for the Madjedbebe archaeological excavation which has changed the scientifically accepted date of modern human occupation in Australia.

[citation needed] In 1998, after completing the Victorian College of the Arts Film and Television post-graduate degree, Vadiveloo returned to Alice Springs and established a media program at the Irrkerlantye Learning Centre, working with Aboriginal children from the Town Camps of Alice Springs and re-engaging them with schooling through media.,[24] Vadiveloo's documentary Trespass (2002), about the Mirrar leader Yvonne Margarula and her battle to stop the Jabiluka mine site, won multiple awards[8] and his documentary Beyond Sorry (2004) about Australia's Stolen Generations premiered on Australia's ABC Television and was a festival favourite at the 2004 Sydney Film Festival.

The company facilitates culturally responsive practice reform and produces and teaches film and television in partnership with marginalised communities.