Áine Kelly-Costello | |
Birth Name: | Áine Maeve Kelly-Costello |
Birth Date: | 1995 3, df=yes |
Country: | New Zealand |
Sport: | Para swimming |
Disability Class: | S11 |
Áine Maeve Kelly-Costello (born 30 March 1995) is a New Zealand climate justice and disability rights campaigner and journalist, and musician. She competed in the London 2012 Paralympic Games in swimming, becoming New Zealand Paralympian #180.
Kelly-Costello attended Pinehurst School in Auckland, New Zealand. Her school nominated her for the 2012 Sir George Elliot Scholarship and she was one of the three successful applicants; scholarship recipients are chosen for their academic ability and having experienced a challenging background.[1] [2]
Kelly-Costello competed in Para swimming as a teenager. She won four gold medals at the 2009 Australian Paralympic Youth Games in Melbourne, VIC, Australia.[3] Kelly-Costello is blind and competed in the S11 sports class. She has a rare recessive genetic disorder known as Leber congenital amaurosis.
She was selected to the New Zealand team for the London 2012 Paralympic Games. She competed in four freestyle and backstroke events.
Kelly-Costello retired from Para swimming following London 2012 aged 17 to focus on her passion for music.[4]
Kelly-Costello worked as a community organiser for the Access Matters campaign for accessibility law.[5]
In 2021, she completed a Masters in Investigative Journalism from Gothenburg University, conducting for her thesis a qualitative analysis on the practice of climate change journalism. This work has been featured in The Conversation.[6] Her writing on climate justice and disability rights has also appeared in other prominent media outlets.[7]
She hosts and produces Disability Crosses Borders, an independent podcast and blog featuring conversations where disability, migration and culture meet.
As a musician, Kelly-Costello plays a variety of instruments, and has led the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra in concert.