Elizabeth Ward is the daughter of Russel Ward (b. Adelaide, 1914-1995), teacher, historian and writer. Her parents were both fourth generation South Australians. She was educated in Sydney and Canberra, and at the University of New England, Armidale. Ward has been a teacher (secondary schools, NSW and the ACT 1956-78), was co-ordinator of the government alternative School Without Walls in Canberra (1974-1977), has taught creative writing to adults, tutored in teacher education, worked in the Canberra Women's Refuge (1978-1981), taught adult literacy to Aboriginal people in Alice Springs, and has been an active member of Women for Survival (the group which organized the women's camp at the US military installation at Pine Gap). Since 1984 she has lived in Adelaide, although she spends a lot of time in Canberra.
Ward works as a management consultant specialising in equal opportunity issues. She has published articles and poems in feminist journals since the 1970s. As well as the poetry and short story listed below, she wrote Father-Daughter Rape (1984), and chapters in Women and Labour Conference Papers (1978) and Different Lives (1987). She won the FAW Donald Stuart Short Story Award 1991 for her unpublished story 'Leaving Tennant Creek'.