Background
With his father as captain, Grono sailed from England to Australia from October 1976 to December 1977, accompanied by his mother, younger brother and 25 other crew members.
With his father as captain, Grono sailed from England to Australia from October 1976 to December 1977, accompanied by his mother, younger brother and 25 other crew members.
He went on to take a senior position at the International Crisis Group, the world’s leading conflict resolution non-governmental organization. As Chief Executive Officer of the Walk Free Foundation, he helped launch the first ever Global Slavery Index. Grono has been Chief Executive Officer of Freedom Fund since January 2014. Grono spent a number of years growing up on the square-rigged sailing ship “Eye of the Wind” (built 1911).
The trip took them to the West Indies, the Panama Canal, the Galapagos, Easter Island, Pitcairn, Tahiti and Vanuatu, and many others
He and his family repeated the voyage in 1981/1982, this time also taking part in the filming of “Nate and Hayes” in Fiji with actor Tommy Lee Jones. Grono received a law degree with first class honours from the University of Sydney.
He also holds a Masters in Public Policy from Princeton University. He began his career as a lawyer in Perth, Western Australia.
He then worked at Goldman Sachs in London from 1992 to 1994 as a researcher
In 2003, Grono began working for the International Crisis Group, the world’s leading conflict prevention non-governmental organization based in Brussels, Belgium. He became the Deputy President and chief operating officer in 2008, responsible for the oversight and management of the organisation’s programmes and operations in nearly thirty countries around the world. As part of this role, he testified on conflict and human rights issues before the European, United Kingdom, Dutch, and Australian Parliaments.
He joined the Walk Free Foundation as its Chief Executive Officer in 2012.
During his time as the Chief Executive Officer, the Walk Free movement gained over 5 million supporters. In 2013, the Foundation launched the first ever Global Slavery Index.
Grono has written widely on international justice, conflict prevention, human rights, and modern slavery in the New York Times, The Guardian, Foreign Policy, Huffington Post and elsewhere. In December 2015, Grono was an expert witness before the United Nations Security Council at its hearing on Trafficking in Persons in Situations of Conflict.
In 2013, the Walk Free Foundation joined with Humanity United and the Legatum Foundation to establish the Freedom Fund, the world’s first private donor fund dedicated to identifying and investing in the most effective front-line efforts to end slavery. was announced by President Bill Clinton at the Clinton Global Initiative in September 2013, who declared, “This is a huge deal and we should all support this.” The Fund focuses its work on areas where slavery is prevalent using a “hotspot” funding model.
lieutenant identifies effective local anti-slavery initiatives and invests to improve their effectiveness and impact. Global initiatives, which coordinate efforts and resources around industries where slavery is common, are also used. The Fund also strives to strengthen the global movement of activists, experts and donors by providing the platform, knowledge and tools for them to connect and work together more effectively.
’s objective is to raise and invest United States dollar 100million to bring much-needed strategic focus to the fight against modern slavery.