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Conference

The State of Australian Cities (SOAC) national conferences have been held biennially since 2003 to support interdisciplinary policy-related urban research. SOAC 5 was held in Melbourne and hosted by the University of Melbourne, RMIT University, Monash University, Swinburne University of Technology and Latrobe University as well as the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute and the Grattan Institute, the Victorian State Government and the City of Melbourne.

Three plenary panels brought researchers from across the country to address ‘big issues’: place-based disadvantage, the design and form of Australian cities, and metropolitan governance. Over 175 papers, in 46 themed sessions, cover topics ranging from planning and governance for environmental sustainability, to housing affordability and adequacy in the context of an ageing population. Healthy communities, better public transport, high quality open space, participatory planning, and issues affecting the peri-urban fringe are also strong sub-themes within this conference. All published papers have been subject to a peer reviewing process.

Papers from all past and subsequent SOAC conferences can be found at the State of Australian Cities Conferences Collection on APO.

Conference paper

Seeing the whole: incorporating indigenous landscape values into planning


This paper presents initial research findings confirming that it is possible to work with Indigenous communities, comprised of both traditional and non traditional owners, to identify Indigenous landscape values of relevance in a rapidly urbanising planning region such as South East Queensland (SEQ).
Conference paper

Policy challenges for metropolitan Greenspace in Sydney


The aim of this paper is to identify and discuss some of the main strategic and policy challenges for planning metropolitan greenspace in Sydney
Conference paper

Measuring planning system performance: the case of housing supply and affordability


This paper presents early findings from a larger study which aims to establish a more comprehensive framework for measuring planning performance in relation to housing supply and affordability outcomes and more widely.
Conference paper

Who killed Melbourne 2030?


Melbourne’s metropolitan strategy Melbourne 2030 was conceived in 1999, born in 2002, pronounced dead in 2009 and finally buried, unmourned and unloved, in 2011. When the newly-elected Baillieu government announced earlier this year that it intended to scrap Melbourne 2030 and replace it with a new metropolitan planning strategy, the response was a deafening silence...
Conference paper

Developing built environment measures for children's independent mobility and active travel- A theoretical perspective


This paper is based on the understanding that what planners measure, how it is measured and how measures are used to inform planning plays an integral part to contributing to healthy and safe environments for children.