Hailey Jihye Ha
Hailey Jihye Ha is a Juris Doctor graduate from the University of Sydney and a Law Graduate at Littles Lawyers, Australia’s largest personal injury law firm serving the CALD (Culturally and Linguistically Diverse) community. At Littles, she plays a client advocacy role, supporting injured people who face language and cross-cultural barriers in navigating the legal system.
Working as a Registered Nurse in Australia and as an international sales administrator in South Korea before pursuing her legal career has given Hailey unique insight into healthcare systems and cross-cultural environments, which she now applies to client engagement and community outreach in the personal injury space.
Hailey has also interned at the UTS Law Health Justice Community Advocacy Clinic, where she contributed to a report aimed at reducing and eliminating restrictive practices affecting people with disabilities.
Power in Partnership
Join us for two days of interactive and energising learning at Health Justice 2025.
Hear from international and local speakers on how power shows up in our work, and what it takes to power authentic engagement. Discover the latest in research, join the CollabLab, and find hope in energising conversations about how we can change our systems for a better future.
Date: 3 & 4 December, 2025
Location: University of Technology Sydney
Whether you’re working in legal, health, community services, government, policy, research or funding, you’ll find plenty of sessions to get inspired by at Health Justice 2025. With limited places to ensure a highly participatory event, get your tickets now and secure your seat.
In a world of growing complexity and uncertainty the importance of robust and innovative social, health and legal services cannot be understated. Innovation is, by its nature, challenging, meaning that gatherings like this one are all the more important.
The conference is a fantastic opportunity to really get to meet colleagues, friends, and other practitioners and professionals across both the legal profession as well as health. These events are so important because they really start the conversation around what our respective professions need in the future, and what our community needs.