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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 6 was held in Sydney and hosted by the University of New South Waltes, Griffith University, the Australian National University and The University of Sydney.

All papers presented at the SOAC 2013 have been subject to a double blind refereeing process and have been reviewed by at least two referees. In particular, the review process assessed each paper in terms of its policy relevance and the contribution to the conceptual or empirical understanding of Australian cities.

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

 

Conference paper

Towards the socioeconomic patterns of the National Broadband Network rollout in Australia


This paper examines the ranking of the sixty earlier NBN release sites in the Socio-Economic Indexes for Area, and Accessibility/Remoteness Index of Australia.
Conference paper

Why has Melbourne closed the gap on Sydney since 2000?


The paper examines a number of hypotheses as to why Melbourne grew more despite initial Sydney advantages.
Conference paper

The yard goes on forever: Community initiatives in maintaining and revitalizing local open space


Open space has long been a valued amenity in metropolitan settings for the multiple dividends delivered: active recreation, passive leisure, conservation, scenery, community gardens, environmental management. This paper reviews efforts to better utilize and manage a particular type of neighbourhood greenspace.
Conference paper

Beyond birdies - enhancing biodiversity on urban golf courses


In urban areas where public land for habitat protection is limited, golf courses can play an important role in supporting biodiversity. This paper aims to develop a greater understanding of factors that enable or constrain the adoption of improved biodiversity practices on Sydney’s golf courses.
Conference paper

Don't be so dense: measuring urban structure and form


This paper seeks to argue that focusing on increasing residential densities across metropolitan areas in the name of sustainability, is problematic.