Equal Ground is built on a simple truth: everyone deserves the same chance to live, grow, and thrive. No race, gender, or background should define a person’s worth. By sharing knowledge and understanding, we can create equality that reaches every corner of society.

Amy Norman is an Australian author, advocate, and founder of the Equal Ground Movement — a global initiative uniting individuals and communities to create a fairer, more compassionate world.
Her path began with her memoir, Dancing with the Devil (Bantam, 2005), which was also published under the title, Living with the Devil (John Blake Publishing UK, 2006), a raw and powerful account of surviving domestic violence and rebuilding a life from its ruins.
The book opened an important conversation about abuse, resilience, and the invisible systems that allow harm to persist.
But for Amy, it was only the beginning. Through years of healing and reflection, she came to see that true equality demands more than policy change. It requires personal awakening and collective understanding.
Every voice matters. Every story holds power.
Every act of compassion creates ripples that move the world toward balance, and it's from that belief that the Equal Ground Movement was born.
A platform for education, awareness, and action.
Equal Ground connects people across generations through:
• The Youth Collective — empowering young people to explore fairness, empathy, and social change.
• Equality Circles — safe spaces for dialogue in schools, workplaces, and communities.
• The Knowledge Hub — a growing library of insights, reflections, and resources that challenge inequality and inspire growth.
Amy’s work sits at the intersection of healing and humanity.
She believes that by examining ourselves — and the systems we live within — we can reshape the world into one rooted in respect, compassion, and justice for all.
Her voice continues to reach readers, survivors, and changemakers alike.
A reminder that from even the darkest places, light can rise, and with it, the courage to create something better.

Audre Lord