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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

If I come back in a few years and nothing has changed, I'll be MAD!: Lessons in co-planning with children from the CATCH/iMATCH Citizen Kid's Planning Group


CATCH/iMATCH is a three-year research project examining the influence of the built, social and policy environments on children’s independent mobility and active travel in Australia. This paper presents the findings of the ‘Citizen Kid’ Planning Group and explores some of the lessons for both research and for planning practice, that have been highlighted in this...
Conference paper

Producing multicultural belonging: the possibilities and discontents of local public spaces in suburban Sydney


The paper follows calls to examine the everyday, micro-level interactions between migrants and city spaces to better understand how more inclusive cities can be achieved
Conference paper

Industry Constructions of Waste in Building Life-Cycles: Zero waste and beyond?


This paper discusses research from an ARC funded project that is investigating ways to minimise waste from building conception to end of life.
Conference paper

Public use zone: a new paradigm for suburban rail station design for Australian cities


This paper reports on a collaborative research project that examines the prospects for a radical re-positioning of rail stations by design premised on a public place-making design approach.
Conference paper

The influence of neoliberalism in the context of population decline: an analysis of planning strategies in Broken Hill, NSW


Using a mix of documents analysis, field observation and open-ended interviews with planners and local policy-makers, this paper uses the case study of Broken Hill, NSW to determine how neoliberalism influences planning policy and to explore the scope for acceptance of a decline-oriented planning approach.