Paterson was born in Melbourne but spent much of her childhood in the high country of Victoria. She graduated from Monash University with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology and Psychology, before moving to Canberra in 2005 to pursue a Masters of Anthropology and participatory Development at the Australian National University.[3]
Following that, Paterson moved to Darwin, Northern Territory to pursue a PhD with Charles Darwin University, studying the impacts of gambling in remote Indigenous communities[4] before returning to Canberra in 2013 to taking up work in a range of research schools and centres at the ANU. In 2017 she became the Director of the Centre for Gambling Research at the ANU and continued to work for the Centre until her election to the ACT Legislative Assembly in 2020.
Political career
Paterson contested the seat of Murrumbidgee at the 2020 ACT elections and was elected in 4th position in the five member electorate. She was the only new Labor Member to be elected at the 2020 elections.[5]
She is currently the Deputy Chair of the Standing Committee on Justice and Community Safety and the Chair of the Environment, Climate Change and Biodiversity Committee.[6]
Paterson has campaigned in parliament for reform of the justice system, including expanding restorative justice in the ACT[7] and the shifting of the presumption of bail for serious driving offences. She has also introduced motions on the protection and education of the ACT's snakes[8] and the introduction of safety initiatives in Canberra's night life districts.[9]
She is the only non-aligned Labor Member of the ACT Legislative Assembly.
Gambling reform
Paterson has been a fierce advocate for gambling reform in the ACT and Australia. In 2022, she initiated her "Bets Off. Game On." which attracted the support of local Canberra community groups and 1015 signatories.[10] In 2023, Paterson campaigned to keep the Molonglo Valley, one of Canberra's newest districts, free from any future poker machines being established and has sought to reform the community club sector to end its reliance on poker machine revenue.[11]