Conference
Owning Institution
The State of Australian Cities (SOAC) national conferences have been held biennially since 2003 to support interdisciplinary policy-related urban research. This third conference was jointly hosted in Adelaide by the University of South Australia, the University of Adelaide and Flinders University.
Papers from all past and subsequent SOAC conferences can be found at the State of Australian Cities Conferences Collection on APO.
SOAC 3 focused on the contemporary form and structure of Australian cities and refereed papers were grouped into six key sub-themes:
- City Economy - economic change and labour market outcomes of globalisation, land use pressures, changing employment locations.
- Social City – including population, migration, immigration, polarisation, equity and disadvantage, housing issues, recreation.
- City Environment - sustainable development, management and performance, natural resource management, limits to growth, impacts of air, water, climate, energy consumption, natural resource uses, conservation, green space.
- City Structures – the emerging morphology of the city – inner suburbs, middle suburbs, the CBD, outer suburbs and the urban-rural fringe, the city region.
- City Governance – including taxation, provision of urban services, public policy formation, planning, urban government, citizenship and the democratic process.
- City Infrastructure – transport, mobility, accessibility, communications and IT, and other urban infrastructure provision.
Conference paper
Rethinking regional innovation systems
The objective of this paper is to review influential theories of regulation and corporate governance with a view to arriving at a rigorous inter-disciplinary framework for the analysis of centrally coordinated regional innovation and regional development policy.
Conference paper
Environmental infrastructure: achieving regional liveability outcomes through a broader regional planning perspective
Investments in the provision of physical and social infrastructure have traditionally been used by governments in developing regions in attempts to offset the impacts of development and to maintain the regional community’s Quality of Life (QoL) expectations.
Conference paper
Housing and health: examining the impacts of generational housing reform on vulnerable urban households
This paper considers the health implications of the current process of generational reform to the way housing is provided to low income households in Australia and especially South Australia.
Conference paper
Governance and implementation challenges for transit oriented developments: findings from a comparison of South East Queensland and Perth region
The key objective of this paper is to conduct an exploratory comparative assessment of transit oriented development (TOD) planning policies and implementation mechanisms in two metropolitan regions.
Conference paper
Understanding water consumption in Sydney
This paper explores the extent to which attitudes to conservation and reduced water use in and around the home may affect the water saving behaviour of households in different kinds of housing in Sydney in a period when restrictions and price rises have become the principle methods to reduce consumption in the city.