Working paper
What matters most? Housing preferences across the Australian population
This working paper examines in depth the responses of over 700 city residents who were asked about their housing and location priorities.
Report
The housing we'd choose
Exploring the relationship between the housing we want, and the housing we have, this report presents original research on the housing preferences of Australians.
Transcript
Australian cities: liveable and sustainable?
Australian cities rate highly internationally on liveability and well-being indices. State and metropolitan governments are keen to promote the liveability of their cities as a means of attracting mobile capital, skilled labour and tourists. An examination of the liveability-environmental sustainability nexus, however, suggests that Australia’s capital cities have gained their high liveability ratings while having...
Report
Cities: who decides?
Grattan Institute's second Cities program investigates decision making in eight of the world’s most successful cities, and asks what governance arrangements accompanied their broad-based improvement. Every city has a different story, but among these differences a number of common themes emerged. These included the importance of public engagement, consistent strategic direction, cross-sectoral collaboration, and regional...
Report
The cities we need
The most important characteristic of a city is whether it meets the needs of its residents, both material and psychological. Despite the fact that these needs are central to our lives, they are often at the periphery of conversations about the future of Australian cities. With these criteria in mind, it is clear that while...