Tasmania
Report
Too critical to fail: the precarity of emergency relief services
Despite being a critical service that provides immediate food relief and other essential items to those in acute need, emergency relief services are themselves experiencing precarity. To better understand this precarity of and the factors underpinning it, this research was conducted through a study into eight Uniting emergency relief services in Victoria and Tasmania.
Discussion paper
Insights into implementation in early childhood education and care 2025
This insights paper shares learnings from 2023 and 2024 iterations of a partner project to increase understanding of the implementation of evidence-based practices in early childhood education and care (ECEC) services. Effective implementation in ECEC requires embedding planned meaningful and sustainable change that is responsive to the unique context of each service. The paper highlights...
Report
Funding and resourcing mechanisms for long term strategies
This evidence snapshot summarises national and international evidence on mechanisms that support the stable funding and resourcing of long-term health and wellbeing strategies. It aims to inform Tasmania’s preventive health planning by identifying models that enable sustained, coordinated action across sectors.
Evaluation
An evaluation of the NDIS Appeals Program Legal Services
Legal Aid is funded by the Federal Government to provide legal support to eligible people who are appealing to the Administrative Review Tribunal about a National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) decision. This process evaluation details the merit of the program, its challenges, as well as the steps necessary for its efficient and ongoing operation.
Report
Recommendation report: Macquarie Point multipurpose stadium project of state significance
The main recommendation for the building of the Macquarie Point multipurpose stadium in Hobart, Tasmania is that the stadium should not proceed. The report lists the main problems as the size, location and geographical features of the site which would impact the spatial and landscape character, urban form and historic cultural heritage of Hobart.