Born and raised in Armonk and Scarsdale, New York, Leslie Cannold migrated to Melbourne in her early twenties.[1] She began writing for The Age as an opinion and education section columnist while raising young children and completing her graduate degrees.
Educated at Wesleyan University, where she studied psychology and theatre, she has a Master of Arts and a Masters in Bioethics from Monash University. She earned her PhD in Education at the University of Melbourne before commencing employment at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics when C. A. J. Coady was director.[2] As of 2011[update] she maintains adjunct positions at both universities though she left academic employment in 2006 to pursue writing and public speaking full-time.[citation needed]
Cannold is noted as one of Australia's leading public thinkers and women.[3] In 2005, she was named alongside Peter Singer, Gustav Nossal, and Inga Clendinnen as one of Australia's top 20 public intellectuals.[4] In 2013, she was named in the Power Index's Top Ten List of most influential brains.[5]
Books and columns
Cannold's devil's advocate column "Both Sides Now" began appearing weekly in Crikey at the start of 2021.[6] Her fortnightly Moral Dilemma column[7] appeared in Sydney's Sunday Sun-Herald from 2007 to 2013. Prior to that, she was an occasional columnist for The Age. Her opinions have also appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald, Crikey!, The Herald Sun, ABC The Drum Unleashed, The Courier Mail, and the national broadsheet The Australian. In 2011, she was recognised with an EVA for a Sunday Age opinion piece on sexual assault.[8]
Her books include the award-winning[9]The Abortion Myth: Feminism morality and the hard choices women make[10][11] and What, No Baby?: Why women are losing the freedom to mother and how they can get it back,[12] which made the Australian Financial Review's top 101 books list.[1] Her first work of fiction, The Book of Rachael,[13] a historical novel, was published in 2011 and reprinted in 2012. She publishes on diverse subject areas, including grief, circumcision, HIV/AIDS, genetic manipulation, ex utero gestation, and regulating Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ARTs). She published chapters in Sperm Wars[14] (2005) and The Australian Book of Atheism (2010),[15] and Destroying the joint (2013).[16]
For many years, she talked life, work, and ethics with well-known radio and TV broadcaster Virginia Trioli on 774 ABC Melbourne, and was heard regularly on Radio 4BC and Deborah Cameron's morning show on 702 ABC Sydney. As of 2013[update], she talks ethics with Angela Owen on ABC Central West, and is a regular panellist on ABC TV's political talk show Q&A[1] and on ABC TV's Compass.[18]
Cannold is past president of Reproductive Choice Australia,[19] a national coalition of pro-choice organisations that played a key role in removing the ban on the abortion drug RU486 in 2006, and of Pro Choice Victoria, which was instrumental in the decriminalisation of abortion in Victoria in 2008.[20] In 2011, she co-founded the not-for-profit speaker referral site No Chicks No Excuses.[21] Leslie Cannold was awarded 2011 Australian Humanist of the Year in recognition of her valuable contribution to public debate on a wide range of ethical issues, of particular relevance to women and family life.[22] Her TEDx talk on abortion has had close to 60,000 views,[23] and in 2016, she spoke to around 6,000 activists from 169 countries[24] at the International Women Deliver conference in Copenhagen about abortion stigma.
Personal life
Cannold identifies herself as a secular Jew.[25] She has two sons.[26]
^Cannold, Leslie (2005). What, no baby? : why women are losing the freedom to mother, and how they can get it back. Fremantle, W.A: Fremantle Arts Centre Press in partnership with Curtin University of Technology. ISBN1-920731-88-1.
^Cannold, Leslie (2011). The Book of Rachael. Melbourne, VIC: Text Publishing Company. ISBN978-1-921758-08-9.
^Cannold, Leslie (2005). "'Walking wallets and one-stop sperm shops': How men fear that women see them in the postmodern reproductive age". In Jones, Heather-Grace.; Kirkman, Maggie (eds.). Sperm wars : the rights and wrongs of reproduction. Sydney: ABC Books for the ABC Broadcasting Corporation. ISBN0-7333-1542-9.
^Cannold, Leslie (2013). "Destroying the joint starts at home". In Caro, Jane (ed.). Destroying the joint. St Lucia, Queensland, Australia: University of Queensland Press. pp. 35–44. ISBN9780702249907.