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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

Visions and pathways for low-to zero carbon urban living - Australia 2050


Visions and Pathways 2050 is a new research and engagement program which will explore and articulate visions and policy-technology pathways for a low- to zerocarbon built environment in Australia. In this paper we outline the motivation and conceptual framework of the project, concurrent research in the area and the planned phases of the project.
Conference paper

Melbourne's north and west metropolitan regional management forum: building community capacity through the regional health and wellbeing implementation strategy


At SOAC 2011, the Victorian Department of Health North and West Metropolitan Region (DH) outlined its Regional Health and Wellbeing Implementation Strategy. Using a Community Capacity Framework, this paper will outline the initiatives implemented and resulting changes to community capacity at the individual, civic engagement, organisational, inter-organisational and community-levels of analysis.
Conference paper

Spinning the wheel: examining decision making process and outcomes in development assessment


An increased emphasis on consolidated city policies has heightened development pressure on existing urban areas. This has occurred alongside increased resident resistance to development. This paper examines in detail the determinations of decision makers in the development assessment process.
Conference paper

The impact of shopping centre attributes on the destination preferences of trip makers in Brisbane


This study uses discrete choice modelling to investigate the importance of destination-specific, tripspecific and individual-specific characteristics of 1,676 retail trips to 194 different shopping centre destinations reported in the Brisbane statistical division.
Conference paper

Corporate clustering in Australian Cities: an analysis of the geographic distribution of ASX-listed headquarters


This paper provides a comprehensive cross-sectional analysis of the geographic dimensions of corporate headquartering both within and between Australia’s major city-regions.