Person
Bill Randolph
ORCID:
Report
How can the benefits of housing regeneration programs be sustained?
Formal exit strategies from social housing regeneration programs assist an estate to become a community by involving local tenants, developing leadership capacity and establishing community-run successor organisations write Keith Jacobs, Kathy Arthurson and Bill Randolph.
Report
Delivering the compact city: current trends and future implications
This paper presents an overview of the characteristics of the market for higher density residential property (flats, units and town houses) in the three largest Australian cities: Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. The paper then discusses some of the implications of current planning proposals for further higher density housing in Australian cities under urban consolidation or...
Report
Qualitative methods and the evaluation of community renewal programs in Australia: towards a national framework
These programs have undertaken a broad mix of renewal activity, from physical redevelopment , to community oriented initiatives. Yet while a number of evaluations of these programs have been undertaken, the development of evaluation methodology has lagged behind that of other countries. The emergence of public housing estate renewal programs in Australia in the last...
Report
Youth homelessness in rural Australia
Young people facing or experiencing homelessness in rural Australia have very different experiences to their urban contemporaries. The Foyer model is one response that could help young rural people establish themselves, without relocating them to cities away from their support networks writes Bill Randolph in this AHURI research bulletin.
Report
Are housing affordability problems creating labour shortages?
Up until 2001 there was little direct evidence that housing affordability problems were heightening labour shortages, as low-income jobs moved to low cost suburbs, and those jobs in the inner city - such as hospitality or retail jobs - were filled by young people who were more likely to share housing costs in group households...