Conference paper
Weak tie relationships in high density residential areas, and the types of spaces used to maintain them
Weak tie relationships are particularly important in a local high density environment because they provide low-level social and practical support while maintaining privacy. The research provides insights into how people use high density spaces socially, and which kinds of spaces are likely to facilitate the maintenance of weak ties.
Conference paper
How and why does community opposition to affordable housing development escalate? "Unsupported development" in Parramatta, NSW
Through a mixed-methods retrospective case study of an ‘extreme’ instance of community opposition to affordable housing development in the Western Sydney LGA of Parramatta, this paper looks at how and why community opposition to affordable housing escalated between 2009 and 2011, addressing this gap in knowledge.
Conference paper
Democratic infrastructure? Delivering affordable housing under Australia's social housing initiative
This paper examines how government strategies to deliver social housing in difficult economic climates impacted upon democratic planning in Australian Cities.
Report
Understanding and addressing community opposition to affordable housing development
This research investigated the causal roots of local opposition to affordable housing projects in Australia. It shows that planning concerns (traffic and built form) can mask prejudice against low-income residents. However community opposition can be exacerbated by dismissive attitudes by government. Developers and government both have roles to better explain to the public what affordable...
Report
Understanding leadership, strategy and organisational dynamics in the not-for-profit housing
The Delphi methodology involved survey questions and qualitative interviews with a panel of CEOs from 14 not-for-profit housing organisations.