Latest news with #KatrionaO'Sullivan


RTÉ News
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- RTÉ News
Prof Katriona O'Sullivan - 'Barry Keoghan wants to play my husband, Dave! He's thrilled!'
Professor Katriona O'Sullivan reflects on the last two years since her award-winning memoir, 'Poor' came out, charting her life growing up in addiction and poverty. She also reveals details of the new play adaptation of 'Poor' in The Gate Theatre and her DNA journey to uncover her late father's true backstory.


Extra.ie
29-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Extra.ie
What is Dr Katriona O'Sullivan's upcoming book about?
Award-winning lecturer at Trinity College Dublin and bestselling author Dr Katriona O'Sullivan has revealed she is in the process of writing a second biographical book. Dr O'Sullivan's memoir, Poor, was released in May 2023, debuting at number 1 on the Irish Non-fiction bestsellers list where it remained for more than a year. Poor tells the story of how Dr O'Sullivan turned her life around after growing up surrounded by poverty, drug addiction and sexual abuse. Award-winning lecturer at Trinity College Dublin and bestselling author Dr Katriona O'Sullivan has revealed she is in the process of writing a second biography. Pic: Bookshelf Podcast/ Instagram At 15, O'Sullivan fell pregnant with her first child, entered homelessness and suffered with alcohol addiction herself. Her novel details how with the help of a number of academic figures, she was able to beat the odds, eventually receiving a PhD from Trinity College Dublin where she still teaches Psychology. The author and lecturer has now revealed that she is 30,000 words into her next book, which is a biography about her body, titled Hunger. Speaking to Ryan Tubridy on his podcast, The Bookshelf with Ryan Tubridy, O'Sullivan made the revelation after Tubridy asked what the name of her next memoir would be. 'I'm writing a second one[autobiography],' she revealed, 'I'm writing a book and it's called Hungry. It's actually a biography of my body and the things that I have been through as a woman. 'It talks about how women like me, poor women particularly or women who are traumatised, how we're driven to be skinny and the things that we do in pursuit of that.' Dr O'Sullivan detailed that it included gastric bands and gastric surgeries.' 'So there's that but it's also, it's hungry for recognition and connection,' she told Ryan, 'It's about my experiences; the hunger I've had and the things that I've done to achieve lots of different things — some that weren't very helpful and some that have been really helpful.' Asked when eager fans could expect to see the book on shelves, Dr O'Sullivan confirmed March 2026. 'I'm 30,000 words in and I'm really enjoying it actually but it's hard because it's a different type of story,' she shared.


Forbes
01-04-2025
- Science
- Forbes
3 Women Reshaping Ireland's Future: From Injustice To Innovation
Aoibheann O Brien, Natasha O'Brien, Katriona O Sullivan As Women's History Month draws to a close, Ireland, a nation still navigating the tensions between its traditional Catholic roots and its progressive modern identity, continues to face gender gaps in pay, leadership, and representation. Yet something distinct is happening. In recent years, Irish women have undergone a cultural reckoning, reclaiming space in national narratives, challenging long-held social norms, and refusing to stay silent about the injustices still embedded in daily life. Among them, three women stand out for the scale, depth, and urgency of their work. Dr. Katriona O'Sullivan, Aoibheann O'Brien, and Natasha O'Brien drive transformative efforts across education, sustainability, and justice. Their leadership is not built on legacy or access but forged from lived experience, driven by data, and powered by a refusal to accept systems that fail the people they claim to serve. When Dr. Katriona O'Sullivan walks into a room, she's not seeking charity; she's demanding recognition. A former teenage mother who left school at 15 and battled homelessness and addiction, O'Sullivan beat the odds to become a senior academic at Maynooth University and one of Ireland's most outspoken advocates for educational equity. But she doesn't want her story to be an exception; she wants to make it a blueprint. "Having less money is not the same as being poor," she says. "Poverty is about a lack of choices, power, dignity." In Ireland, just 9% of students from disadvantaged backgrounds enter STEM fields compared to 25% from higher-income families. O'Sullivan's mission is to close that gap. She's connecting girls from underrepresented communities with training, mentorship, and job opportunities through her STEM-Passport for Inclusion program, which was developed in partnership with the government and nearly 200 companies, such as Microsoft. Nearly 7,000 girls have participated so far, with a target of 11,000 by 2027. "We're in a national talent crisis, and yet we're throwing away the potential of girls living in poverty," she says. "That's not just unjust. It's short-sighted." Dr Katriona O'Sullivan pictured with students from STEM Passport for Inclusion programme at ... More Microsoft Dublin November 2024 For O'Sullivan, the work goes beyond numbers. It's about reshaping cultural perceptions. "Disadvantage doesn't mean deficiency," she says. It means you've had to become fluent in resilience, hustle, and adaptation. To me, that is excellence." Yet she knows that policy alone won't change hearts and minds. That's why O'Sullivan shares that she continues to speak boldly, demand more, and tell the truth about what it takes to overcome socio-economic bias. "Talent is everywhere. Opportunity isn't," she shares. "That's the gap I'm trying to close. I want to create an Ireland where a girl like me doesn't have to beat the odds to thrive—because the odds are finally on her side." Aoibheann O'Brien returned to recession-weary Dublin in 2012 with a question: how can a country throw away tons of food while so many go hungry? The result was FoodCloud, a tech-driven social enterprise transforming how Ireland handles food waste and food insecurity. FoodCloud Co-founders Aoibheann O'Brien and Iseult Ward host UN FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu, and ... More his team In Dublin Hub June 2024 "I was working in banking in London and saw these amazing food-sharing initiatives emerging — in Dublin, there was nothing," she says. "It started with one market and mission: connect surplus food to people who need it. But we knew from day one that charity alone wasn't enough. This had to scale." Globally, one-third of all food produced is wasted, contributing 8–10% of total greenhouse gas emissions. In Ireland alone, an estimated 750,000 tonnes of food is wasted annually (enough to feed every person in Ireland three meals a day for more than three months). FoodCloud's digital platform now connects over 500 retail stores and 200 food producers to 650 charities across Ireland, enabling the redistribution of surplus food that would otherwise be wasted. Their platform, FOODIVERSE, operates in six countries, from the UK to Kenya. "We've redistributed the equivalent of 340 million meals," says O'Brien. "Our goal is to hit one billion meals by 2030 — not by scaling endlessly ourselves, but by helping others do what we've done faster and better. It's about using what we've built — all the sweat and years of work to help others leapfrog," she says. "Food waste isn't just a climate issue or a supply chain glitch — it's a massive systems failure," O'Brien continues. "And what's powerful is that tackling it has immediate, measurable social impact. Today, people are eating meals made from the food we rescued yesterday — and that same action is reducing emissions for the future." The organization also partners with Harvard University and other institutions to embed food redistribution into national and international policy frameworks. But while the ambition is global, the heart of the mission remains local. "We imagine a world where Ireland becomes the world's first zero food waste country," she says. "And if we do, it won't be because we treated food as waste — it'll be because we treated it as worth." Natasha O'Brien never set out to lead a movement. But after surviving a violent physical attack and watching her assailant walk free despite overwhelming evidence—she became the voice of a nation demanding change. "The system didn't fail me," she says. "It functioned exactly as it was designed—to protect the offender, not the victim." Over 1,000 people who gathered in support of assault victim Natasha O'Brien at a protest in her home ... More city of Limerick to show solidarity. Picture: Olena Oleksienko/ilovelimerick In June 2024, her attacker, a serving soldier, received a suspended sentence despite CCTV footage, eyewitness testimony, and text messages confirming intent. The ruling ignited public outrage. Within days, protests erupted across Ireland—thousands marched holding signs that read 'Her Name Is Natasha.' What began as one woman's pursuit of justice quickly became something more significant: a national reckoning with how Ireland's justice system treats victims of violence—and how it responds when those victims speak out. At the center stood O'Brien. Unflinching. Unapologetic. Her story forced the country to confront a flawed legal system and the cultural discomfort with women who challenged it. As journalist Justine McCarthy observed, 'Ireland loves its strong women—as long as they're dead or never lived at all.' Natasha O'Brien shattered this tradition. She stood defiant and shouted loud against a system she felt tried to make her, and so many other women invisible. Her successful appeal resulted in a new sentence, but for O'Brien, her work was just beginning. She is now collaborating with criminologists and advising Irish policymakers on legislative reform around sentencing, victim protection, and judicial accountability. O'Brien's leadership is reshaping more than policy. It's shifting Ireland's cultural conversation about power, safety, and whose voices are heard. 'The Ireland I'm fighting for is one where silence isn't the cost of survival, and justice doesn't have to be earned.' In a moment when global conversations about equity are growing more polarized, these three women prioritize substance over symbolism. Though working in different spheres, their approaches are committed to identifying structural problems, applying evidence-based solutions, and rethinking accountability. While Ireland grapples with its legacy of inequality, these women stand out not by simply seeking acknowledgment, but by fundamentally reshaping leadership itself. They refuse to be relegated to historical footnotes or to wait for permission to create change. As Women's History Month concludes, their work clearly embodies not just Ireland's history or current reality, but hope for a more equitable future.