52 results
Search Results
2. Digital media, ageing and faith: Older Sri Lankan migrants in Australia and their digital articulations of transnational religion.
- Author
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Gamage, Shashini, Wilding, Raelene, and Baldassar, Loretta
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DIGITAL media , *OLDER people , *DIGITAL technology , *ELECTRONIC paper , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
To date, older adults have received little attention in the newly emerging technological narratives of transnational religion. This is surprising, given the strong association of later life with spiritual and religious engagement, but it likely reflects the ongoing assumption that older adults are technophobic or technologically incompetent. Drawing on ethnographic interviews with older Sinhalese Buddhist migrants from Sri Lanka, living in Melbourne, this paper explores the digital articulations of transnational religion that arise from older migrants' uses of digital media. We focus on how engagements with digital media enable older Sinhalese to respond to an urgent need to accumulate merit in later life, facilitating their temporal strategies for ageing as migrants. We argue that these digital articulations transform both the religious imaginary and the religious practices that validate and legitimize a life well‐lived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Understanding conviviality in Australian suburbs with high Muslim concentrations: A qualitative case study in Melbourne.
- Author
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Dekker, Karien and Haw, Ashleigh
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SUBURBS , *MUSLIMS , *ATTITUDES toward religion , *RELIGIOUS groups , *RELIGIOUS minorities , *CITIES & towns , *MUSLIM identity - Abstract
This article explores the concept of conviviality: the practice and negotiation of sharing space in suburbs with diverse populations. Australia has a growing Muslim population and reports of Islamophobia remain widespread. While there is some evidence, however, that forming intercultural connections can foster more positive attitudes toward religious minority groups, we know little about how Muslim and non‐Muslim communities share space in Australia. This paper presents the findings of a qualitative investigation into how conviviality is perceived in Australian suburbs with high concentrations of Muslim residents. Following qualitative, thematic analysis of 15 interviews with multicultural service providers who work with Muslims in Melbourne, Victoria, we conclude that conviviality is fostered by a sense of community between people who share similar backgrounds as well as increased opportunities to form intercultural social connections. We discuss the scholarly and policy implications of these findings, with consideration of existing arguments about the practices of sharing space in Australian cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Describing the development and implementation of a novel collaborative multidisciplinary approach to deliver foot health supports for individuals experiencing homelessness and its outcomes.
- Author
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Ogrin, Rajna, Rushford, Mary-Anne, Fallon, Joseph, Mannix, Rebecca, Quinn, Ben, and Lewis, Anthony
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HOMELESS persons , *FOOT , *POOR communities , *FIRST aid kits , *FOOT care , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HOMELESS children - Abstract
Basic foot care is a real need of people experiencing homelessness. To improve access to foot health for this group, three services structured to provide healthcare support for people experiencing homelessness collaborated in metropolitan Melbourne, Australia: an established nurse-led Homeless Persons Program (HPP), a specialty community health podiatry clinic servicing people experiencing homelessness, and a charity supporting disadvantaged communities providing free socks, foot first aid kits and second-hand footwear for distribution by nurses and podiatrists of participating services. This paper outlines the implementation and evaluation of this collaboration. A four stage implementation approach was used, addressing: 1. Who needs to do what differently? 2. What are the barriers and enablers that need to be addressed? 3. Which intervention components could overcome the modifiable barriers and enhance the enablers? 4. How can the changes be measured? The evaluation prospectively collected information about how HPP nurses referred adults to podiatry, and whether the referred individuals accessed the podiatry clinic, the outcomes of the podiatry visit, and how many received footwear, socks and foot first aid kits provided by the non-profit organisation. Over 1st June 2019 and 31st December 2020, 52 individuals were identified as adults who could potentially benefit from podiatry by the HPP nurses, of which 33 accessed podiatry. Those who did not visit the podiatry clinic were more likely to be born outside of Australia, live in more precarious housing (crisis accommodation and rough sleeping), have slightly more predisposing factors for homelessness, but have fewer medical, psychological and cognitive conditions. A structured approach including processes, education, regular, outreach to youth refuges and formal outcome monitoring enabled foot health care access in people experiencing homelessness. Further research is needed to ascertain how to support participants at risk of foot problems to access podiatry before their foot health issue reaches crisis point. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Too late for early intervention? The Healthy Ageing Service's mental health response.
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Dumble, Jessica, Sadler, Paul, Cottrell, Tanya, Planinic, Antonia, Perin, Stephanie, Harrison, Chris, Moss, Francine, Aradhye, Shama, and Chong, Terence WH
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MENTAL health services , *AGING , *PRIMARY health care - Abstract
Objectives: This paper describes the rationale for and development of an innovative mental health service for people aged over 65 years living in Northern and Eastern Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Conclusion: The Healthy Ageing Service (HAS) was established in July 2020 to provide care for people aged over 65 years experiencing mild-to-moderate mental health concerns. It embraces a prevention and early intervention model of care. It provides primary consultation and brief intervention, secondary consultation, and capacity building to the primary healthcare sector. This innovative service is a Commonwealth-funded partnership between two tertiary mental health service providers that incorporates the recommendations from two major Royal Commissions. It demonstrates a service that acts as a bridge between primary and specialist mental health care, thereby extending mental health services to target the 'missing middle' and is potentially a model for mental health service provision throughout Victoria and Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. The virtual clubhouse: Australian women's cycling and digital counterpublics.
- Author
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Trott, Verity
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WOMEN'S cycling , *WOMEN'S sports , *AUSTRALIANS , *CYCLING , *SPORTS participation , *WOMEN cyclists - Abstract
In the past decade, there have been several efforts in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia to increase the opportunities and improve the experiences of women cyclists in recreational and racing contexts. However, cycling in Victoria and Australia more broadly continues to be a male dominated sport. This study incorporates a digital ethnography of two Melbourne-based women's cycling Facebook groups including 11 interviews with stakeholders over the period of 2017–2018 to analyse how women and girls are harnessing social media to create counter sports spaces to enhance women's cycling. The paper explores the emergence of the "virtual clubhouse" which operates as a digitally networked counterpublic, providing a space for women and gender diverse cyclists to connect, coproduce and engage in knowledge sharing practices, and build a more inclusive culture for cycling that challenges dominant, mainstream narratives of women's sport. The "virtual clubhouse" addresses a gap in the physical bicycle landscape in which cycling and cycling knowledge (including bicycle maintenance) is largely mediated by men and cycling clubs are configured as masculine spaces within Australia. This research adds further depth into a specific localised network of women cyclists to consider how physical and online sports cultures and communities are intertwined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Evaluating the Melbourne Strategic Assessment—Elegant on process, currently failing on implementation.
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Lowe, Kim W and Wescott, Geoffrey
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ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *BIOTIC communities , *WETLAND restoration , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *ENVIRONMENTAL standards , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Summary: This paper provides a critical analysis of the development and current outcomes of Australia's first endorsed strategic assessment under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, namely, the Melbourne Strategic Assessment. It covers progress towards protection of a number of Nationally Significant Species and Ecological Communities – most notably, the native grassland communities immediately adjacent to Melbourne's Urban Growth Boundary. The Commonwealth approval to protect biodiversity and allow urban development was made in 2010 and it aimed to achieve its outcomes by 2020. These outcomes included providing new land for homes, for new transport corridors, and for conservation of biodiversity. Natural Temperate Grassland (4,667 ha), Grassy Eucalypt Woodland (709 ha) and seven other Matters of National Environmental Significance will be impacted. Mitigation for this is establishment of 15,000 ha of grassland reserves, 1,200 ha of grassy woodland reserves, over 4,000 ha of other land zoned for conservation and 300 ha of wetland restoration. We conclude that the Melbourne Strategic Assessment has been a success in terms of the elegance and comprehensiveness of the approach, in cooperation between the levels of government, in the economic benefits, and in some aspects of social engagement of the agreement. However, the achievement of environmental outcomes must be currently considered a failure due to poor implementation. This failure includes not meeting the agreed 10 year deadline for land acquisition and management, poor monitoring and protection of set‐aside areas, and in reporting. We offer suggestions for how these current shortcomings could be overcome. These align well with the recommendations of the review of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (The independent statutory review of the Act in 2020) and include the establishment of the proposed Office of Compliance and Enforcement, the adoption of National Environmental Standards and the reforms regarding the role of Indigenous Australians in strategic assessments. If these were adopted, we conclude that the strategic assessment approach should be more widely used because of the more holistic approach and efficiencies that it envisages compared with site by site approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Policy-Relevant Spatial Indicators of Urban Liveability And Sustainability: Scaling From Local to Global.
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Higgs, C., Alderton, A., Rozek, J., Adlakha, D., Badland, H., Boeing, G., Both, A., Cerin, E., Chandrabose, M., De Gruyter, C., De Livera, A., Gunn, L., Hinckson, E., Liu, S., Mavoa, S., Sallis, J. F., Simons, K., and Giles-Corti, B.
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WORKFLOW software , *URBAN planning , *SUSTAINABLE urban development , *BUILT environment , *COMMUNITIES , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Urban liveability is a global priority for creating healthy, sustainable cities. Measurement of policy-relevant spatial indicators of the built and natural environment supports city planning at all levels of government. Analysis of their spatial distribution within cities, and impacts on individuals and communities, is crucial to ensure planning decisions are effective and equitable. This paper outlines challenges and lessons from a 5-year collaborative research program, scaling up a software workflow for calculating a composite indicator of urban liveability for residential address points across Melbourne, to Australia's 21 largest cities, and further extension to 25 global cities in diverse contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Educational aspirations and experiences of refugee-background African youth in Australia: a case study.
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Molla, Tebeje
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STUDENT aspirations , *SOCIAL integration , *CAPABILITIES approach (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL justice , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Access to educational opportunities is instrumental for social integration of refugee youth. This paper reports on a qualitative case study of educational aspirations and experiences of refugee-background African youth (RAY) in Melbourne, Australia. Guided by a capability approach to social justice, in-depth interviews were conducted with two groups of RAY: those who have transitioned to higher education (HE), and those who have not transitioned to HE after completing high school. The findings show that: (a) RAY share a firm belief in the value of HE; (b) but they are differently positioned to convert opportunities into achievements – e.g. only the refugee youth with high levels of navigational capacity take advantage of the available flexible pathways to HE; (c) the stress of racism pervades the educational experiences of both groups; and (d) some African refugee youth have shown a considerable level of resilience in that, despite the challenges of racism, a history of disrupted educational trajectories and a lack of scholarly resources at home, they have transitioned to and thrived in HE. In light of these findings, the paper draws some implications for equity policies and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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10. Institutional work by migrant women leaders in precarious spaces of volunteering in Melbourne, Australia.
- Author
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Tsarenko, Yelena, Cruz, Angela Gracia B., Snuggs, Elizabeth, and Tojib, Dewi
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WOMEN leaders , *VOLUNTEERS , *VOLUNTEER service , *WOMEN employees , *NONPROFIT sector - Abstract
This paper analyses the role that migrant women leaders play in sustaining precarious spaces of community-led volunteering. The voluntary sector has been theorised as an interstitial yet connective space that nourishes unmet needs of migrant women in the context of familial demands, labour market marginalisation, and a diminishing welfare state. While state-funded initiatives are often intended to address these gendered asymmetries, less is known about the dynamics of precarious spaces of community-led volunteering, and in particular about the leaders who appreciate and navigate the complexities of these spaces. Grounding our analysis in feminist geographies of volunteering literature, and employing the concept of institutional work, we interview multiple stakeholders in a network of Local Migrant Women's Clubs (LMWCs) in Australia. In this precarious space, migrant women leaders are required to bridge contradictory logics of migrant women's vulnerabilities and escalating administrative expectations under poorly-resourced conditions. Our analysis advances institutional work as a productive frame to trace linkages between divergent institutional agendas at the macro-level, and the distributed agency and invisible labour of migrant women leaders at the level of lived experience. Overall, the lens of institutional work foregrounds the tacit and intensive investments required on the part of poorly resourced migrant women leaders to maintain required circulations of care in their local communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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11. Insurance, fire and the peri-urban: perceptions of changing communities in Melbourne's rural-urban interface.
- Author
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Young, Travis, Lucas, Chloe, and Booth, Kate
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- *
WILDFIRE prevention , *RISK perception , *EMERGENCY management , *DISASTER resilience , *COMMUNITY change , *INSURANCE , *FIRE management - Abstract
Across the world, cities are growing, blurring lines between urban and rural. In Australia, peri-urban areas are undergoing demographic shifts and extensive development. In the literature, these shifts are characterised by differences in the risk perceptions and hazard experiences between established and incoming residents. In this paper, we illustrate how some of these differences are perceived by focusing on house and contents insurance in the bushfire-prone City of Whittlesea on the fringes of Greater Melbourne. This location captures the complex relationship between growing population and high bushfire risk, and is the site of the country's deadliest bushfire event, Black Saturday, in 2009. Through in-depth interviews, we observe that residents perceive insurance as playing a role in peri-urban change. Specifically, underinsurance is understood to be a challenge faced by many impacted by the Black Saturday fires, and contributes to feelings of uncertainty regarding the capacities of changing communities to work together to prepare for and recover from future fires. Our focus on insurance is informed by the need to better understand the social qualities of this dimension of disaster preparedness and recovery, and how perceptions of insurance amid peri-urban change may help produce social patterns and trends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Weighted dynamic time warping for traffic flow clustering.
- Author
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Li, Man, Zhu, Ye, Zhao, Taige, and Angelova, Maia
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TRAFFIC flow , *TRAFFIC patterns , *SMART cities , *CITY traffic , *URBAN growth , *INFORMATION superhighway , *EUCLIDEAN distance - Abstract
• Providing a more effective Weighed DTW for traffic flow data analysis. • Systematically analysing and labelling a large real traffic dataset from the City of Melbourne. • GWDTW outperforms Euclidean and DTW using k-medoid for clustering traffic flow data. This paper presents a novel similarity measure to identify interesting traffic patterns on a large traffic flow time series data for the central suburbs of Melbourne city in Australia. This new measure is a weighted Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) method based on Gaussian probability function, named GWDTW, that reflects the relative importance of peak hours. We have shown its superior performance over two benchmark similarity measures, the Euclidean distance and conventional DTW measure, on the intersection clustering task using k -medoids clustering algorithm, with respect to both internal and external evaluation measures. With intensive evaluation, the results show that GWDTW is a very effective similarity measure for modelling traffic behaviours, which can provide policy makers with more valuable information for infrastructure design, and smart city development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. A deliberate language policy or a perceived lack of agency: Heritage language maintenance in the Polish community in Melbourne.
- Author
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Romanowski, Piotr
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LANGUAGE maintenance , *LANGUAGE policy , *POLISH language , *FAMILY policy , *FAMILY relations , *INCUMBENCY (Public officers) - Abstract
Aims: By applying the tripartite framework of family language policy, this study seeks to gain insight into heritage language maintenance of Polish families in Melbourne. To this end, an integrative investigation of family language policy encapsulating the heritage language perceptions, practices and management will be employed. Methodology: Based on the data collected through the online questionnaire supplemented with in-depth interviews, quantitative and qualitative analyses have been conducted to obtain a sociolinguistic picture of the convoluted dependencies. Data and analysis: The interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim and coded according to the grounded theory approach. The recurrent themes were noted. The existing social patterns were conceptualised through the process of constant comparison. The excerpts selected for analysis illustrate how critical have been the informants' beliefs and practices concerning heritage language maintenance. Findings and conclusions: The data analyses of the researched families disclose a wide range of practices where certain discrepancies are observed between declarations and the actual language behaviours. It also emerges that without parents' reinforcement and establishing the heritage language as a default means of communication at home, children suffer from lower productive skills. Originality: This paper delves into how Polish is maintained as a heritage language by the second generation of Polish-speaking immigrants. It explores the Polish community, one of the well-established yet understudied groups that make up multicultural Australia. It unfolds an account of the dynamics of family language policy, illustrating how they are constantly negotiated, contested and formed by parents. Significance/implications: The findings contribute to the ongoing discussion of language policies and heritage language maintenance by demonstrating that the hardship and distress resulting from heritage language acquisition as well as language maintenance are incumbent primarily on family language policy. The researched group is an average-size immigrant community situated in the context with limited institutional support resolving down to Polish Saturday schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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14. The role of neighbourhoods accessibility in residential mobility.
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Saghapour, Tayebeh and Moridpour, Sara
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STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas , *RESIDENTIAL mobility , *NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
Abstract Household decisions to move from or stay at a current location may be based on a great number of variables. There has been substantial discussion among planners about the effect of the built environment in the choice of residential location. However, there is limited research on the role of non-motorised accessibility on residential location. Households may base their decision to move from or stay at a current location on the neighbourhood's accessibility. The public transport accessibility, walkability and bikeability of a neighbourhood may affect residents' decisions to stay or move from their current location. The focus of this paper is on modelling and comparing the influence of non-motorised accessibility measures on the number of years that households stay at their current location. The paper addresses this issue by employing three non-motorised accessibility measures in separate ordered logistic regression (OLR) models. Focusing on metropolitan Melbourne, Australia, the Victorian Integrated Survey of Travel and Activity (VISTA, 2012) was adopted to model years of residency incorporating socio-economic characteristics, built environment features and accessibility measures. Key findings indicate that non-motorised accessibility has statistically-significant impacts on the number of years that residents live at their current address. Furthermore, of the accessibility measures, access to public transport has the greatest impact. Highlights • This paper aims at investigating the influence of non-motorised accessibility on residential location. • Focusing on Melbourne, Australia, three accessibility measures were employed in Ordered Logistic Regression (OLR) models. • Findings indicate that accessibility had significant impacts on residents' tendency to stay in the same neighbourhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. A unified approach to earthworks for residential, industrial and commercial developments consistent with AS3798-2007.
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Piccolo, David, Mostyn, Garry, and Salim, Agustria
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EARTHWORK , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *HOUSE construction - Abstract
This paper presents an approach to earthworks design and construction for residential, industrial and commercial developments in the eastern states of Australia, mostly for Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne. This approach has been implemented successfully over a range of projects and development types, for various ground conditions, over a period of 15 years. The approach has benefited from the Authors' experience with claims and disputes arising from earthworks. It is acknowledged that there are many possible approaches to earthworks projects, and the intention of the paper is to raise awareness of the importance of a unified approach to earthworks design, construction, testing and documentation, auditing and certification consistent with AS3798-2007. The paper argues that whilst the 'earthworks specification' is a major component of the earthworks approach, it is only part of the approach. Far too often a few notes on a civil drawing represent the entire thinking regarding the earthworks component of a project/development. Often drawings and specifications are prepared with little evidence that the works have been designed for particular end use. Included in this paper is an example earthworks specification, and discussion of various clauses in these, in light of usual practice and the Authors' experience with earthworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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16. The alternate infrastructures that support digital counter publics: Digital inequality in an Australian public housing estate.
- Author
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van Holstein, Ellen, Dulfer, Nicole, Smith, Catherine, and Garner, Alice
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PLANNED communities , *PUBLIC housing , *CITIES & towns , *INTERNET service providers , *DIGITAL technology - Abstract
In this paper we interrogate how digital technologies and practices contribute to imaginaries of counter cities by telling the stories of people who navigate digital inequality. Digital inequality offers a lens onto the ways in which the privatised provision of services reshapes opportunities for collective organising. Digital technologies are commonly viewed as useful tools for collective organising, overlooking the fact that digital products are inequitable in their functioning and availability. In Australia, internet connections are offered as a for-profit service and digital inequality is persistent. The paper presents focus groups and participatory mapping interviews with residents of a Melbourne public housing estate. The study reveals that public housing residents pay relatively more money and receive lower quality service from internet providers. We identify three forms of dependency that arise as residents endeavour to stay connected to an essential infrastructure that was designed without their needs in mind: strategic alliances with community organisations to secure a digitally connected future; household strategies for meeting digital needs; and collaborative troubleshooting with technological 'experts'. In the conclusion we stress that digital infrastructures both require and enable collective organising and we argue that the political projects of counter cities must protect those infrastructures that support the relationships that can lead to more equitable cities. • Public housing residents pay more for internet and receive less reliable connections. • Telecom providers do not communicate barriers nor provide solutions within their ability. • Individualisation of services inhibits collective action for just provision. • Concept of counter publics needs to be critical of inequitable internet provisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Fifth-generation district heating and cooling: Opportunities and implementation challenges in a mild climate.
- Author
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Gjoka, Kristian, Rismanchi, Behzad, and Crawford, Robert H.
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CLIMATE change , *HEATING from central stations , *HEAT sinks , *HEATING , *ELECTRICITY pricing , *ECONOMIC indicators - Abstract
Fifth-generation district heating and cooling (5GDHC) systems have the potential to provide simultaneous heating and cooling, allowing for energy exchange between users with different needs. However, their viability in mild climates with a higher share of cooling demand remains unclear. In this paper, we propose a framework for assessing the engineering, economic and environmental performance of a 5GDHC system compared to a state-of-the-art business-as-usual solution and demonstrate it through a practical case study for a university campus in Melbourne, Australia. When accessible heat sources and sinks are available, the 5GDHC system provides a cost-effective solution, with annual cost savings between 9 and 29 % and GHG emissions reduction between 25 and 58 % compared to an already advanced business-as-usual system. Additionally, by using peak off-peak tariffs and an hourly emission factor for the electricity consumed, we demonstrate the 5GDHC operational flexibility in pursuing different objectives, such as minimising cost or emissions, respectively. The results suggest that 5GDHC systems are an economically and environmentally viable solution in milder climates, and a successful implementation of 5GDHC in Australia can create new market opportunities and pave the way for its adoption in other countries with similar climatic conditions and no established history of district heating systems. • 5GDHC systems are analysed in a new context with a milder climate. • A multi-dimensional assessment framework is proposed. • The framework is demonstrated through a practical case study in Melbourne, Australia. • Flexibility is assessed through varying electricity tariffs and emission factors. • The strong performance of the 5GDHC system offers insights into similar contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. Households' willingness to pay for water for the environment in an urban setting.
- Author
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Cooper, Bethany, Crase, Lin, and Burton, Michael
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WILLINGNESS to pay , *MUNICIPAL water supply , *CITY dwellers , *CITIES & towns , *HOUSEHOLDS , *SALINE water conversion , *RAINWATER - Abstract
Continued population growth, and climate change are placing stress on many of the world's water sources and this often manifests in environmental damage to rivers and wetlands. Most of the published literature around allocating more water to the environment considers trade-offs with agriculture. In contrast this study focusses on scenarios for different potable water supplies in cities and thus adds a novel perspective on the value of riverine restoration. This study sheds light on urban households' willingness to pay for more water to be allocated to the environment where it directly competes with their own water demands. The study uses two stated preference techniques (choice modelling and best-worst scaling) to establish the value of environmental water and the motivations for households paying for an increase in environmental water reserves. The study is set in Australia's fastest growing city, Melbourne, although the approach and method have implications for other developed-world settings. The paper also offers practical advice on the management of water allocated for different uses. Overall, the results indicate a positive and significant willingness to pay by households for additional water entitlements. Importantly, this provides a benchmark for contemplating the costs and benefits of activating alternative water supplies, such as desalination, to free up rainwater for environmental purposes. • Urban residents are willing to make non-trivial payments for water for the environment. • Few respondents object to the reassignment of water to environmental uses. • The value residents place on additional water for urban waterways is identified. • Improvements in water quality and preserving platypus is important to residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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19. Finite element simulation of unbonded retrofitting system for a steel bridge in Australia.
- Author
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Al-Mosawe, Alaa, Al-Mahaidi, Riadh, Alwash, Dia, and Zhao, Xiao-Ling
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IRON & steel bridges , *RETROFITTING , *STEEL girders , *FINITE element method , *TRUSS bridges - Abstract
Pre-stressed unbonded retrofit (PUR) CFRP strengthening of steel structures is becoming a common method of strengthening metallic structures. This paper presents a comprehensive study on the use of the PUR CFRP-strengthening method for strengthening a steel bridge in Melbourne, Australia. Finite element analysis is performed in this study to model the entire bridge and the strengthened element, and the model is validated using actual on-site measurements which showed the stress developments of two girders before and after strengthening when a fully loaded truck passed over the bridge. A parametric study is performed to investigate the stress development of steel girders strengthened with the PUR system under different girder-deck levels of rigidity. The results showed a perfect match between the finite element modelling and actual measurements, and the effectiveness of the PUR system under critical conditions such as different girder-deck stiffness connection levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Design of the metro tunnel project tunnel linings for fire testing.
- Author
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Guerrieri, Maurice, Sanabria, Carlos, Lee, Wei Ming, Pazmino, Esteban, and Patel, Rahul
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TUNNEL design & construction , *TUNNEL lining , *TUNNEL ventilation , *TUNNELS , *UNDERGROUND construction , *FIRE testing , *PIPELINE transportation - Abstract
With a growing pipeline of major transport infrastructure projects transforming Victoria's road and rail networks, there is an increase in demand for the construction of underground tunnels using the shield tunneling method. Such tunnels need to be designed for fire resistance in order to preserve both structural integrity and serviceability in the event of a fire event. This paper describes the approach taken to design the concrete tunnel lining segments for Melbourne's Metro Tunnel Project for structural stability during a severe fire incident. Two types of fire testing programs were implemented, both of which used the RABT ZTV (rail) fire curve. The first involved the fire testing of 12 unloaded flat panels in order to determine whether a particular concrete mix design would be susceptible to spalling. Second, six prototype full scale tunnel lining segments were subjected to full scale structural fire testing, for the first time in Australia. The results indicated that full scale structurally loaded fire tests are essential as unloaded flat panels underestimate the degree of spalling. Addition of PP fibers are successful in mitigating spalling in addition to using pozzolans cements such as flyash and slag. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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21. Who is Islamophobic and why? Explanations of Islamophobia in two suburbs with high Muslim concentrations in Melbourne's north.
- Author
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Dekker, Karien
- Subjects
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ISLAMOPHOBIA , *MUSLIMS , *SUBURBS , *ETHNIC relations , *SEMI-structured interviews , *EXPLANATION - Abstract
This paper adds to the existing insights into the occurrence, explanations for and experience of Islamophobia in Australia by focusing on contact with the 'other' in suburbs with high concentrations of Muslims. The study was conducted in two diverse and socio-economically disadvantaged localities with high Muslim concentrations in metropolitan Melbourne. A mixed method approach was used: a quantitative analysis of 2016–2017 survey data in two suburbs (N = 301), Broadmeadows and Fawkner in Melbourne's north, followed by local experiences of Islamophobia, drawing from 36 semi-structured follow-up interviews with local residents, while keeping in mind specific local circumstances. It was found that positive contact with diverse neighbours makes people less Islamophobic, but negative experiences makes them more Islamophobic. These findings provide evidence for the 'contact theory' as well as the 'threat theory' in explaining local variations in the levels of Islamophobia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The post-politics of transport: establishing a new meeting ground for transport politics.
- Author
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Legacy, Crystal
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URBAN transportation , *POLITICAL participation , *CITIES & towns , *URBAN planning - Abstract
This paper brings together two disparate but critical bodies of literature about contemporary citizen participation in the Australian city: transport politics and post-politics. The argument is advanced that state and citizen actor relations--as they exist in the governance and management of Australian urban transport--have taken on characteristics of post-politics. By conceiving of citizen participation in this manner, new ways of understanding it are generated and it is possible to appreciate how such participation is shaped by state actors both across time and in response to the politicisation of transport proposals. The paper illustrates the extent to which citizen engagement has become a new focal point in transport politics, particularly given citizens' capacities to politicise proposals and transport trajectories. It achieves such ends by drawing upon key-informant interviews conducted between 2013 and 2016 with public transport advocates, select resident groups, and local and state level planning officials from Melbourne, Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Working-Class Consumer Behavior in “Marvellous Melbourne” and Buenos Aires, The “Paris of South America”.
- Author
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Ricardi, Pamela
- Subjects
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ARCHAEOLOGY , *INNER cities , *CITIES & towns , *CONSUMER behavior , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Recent work in Melbourne, including the papers in this volume, has shed new light on the archaeology of this major nineteenth-century urban center. But how does Melbourne compare to other important contemporary cities, particularly those outside the British Empire? This paper compares “Marvellous Melbourne” against the “Paris of South America,” Buenos Aires, with a focus on exploring consumer behavior and transnational trade. Two case studies are considered, Casselden Place (Melbourne) and La Casa Peña (Buenos Aires) and while some differences are encountered, the overall similarity in results points to the interconnectedness of the world during the period under study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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24. "If There Isn't Skyscrapers, Don't Play There!" Rock Music Scenes, Regional Touring, and Music Policy in Australia.
- Author
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Rogers, Ian and Whiting, Samuel
- Subjects
- *
ROCK music , *CAPITAL cities , *FEDERAL aid , *MUSICAL performance , *SKYSCRAPERS - Abstract
Australia's concentrated population presents particular challenges for touring music acts. The country's capital cities are few, and the distance between these cities is not dotted with the type of vibrant regional music scene commonly found abroad. Yet due to an array of state and federal arts grants – all aiming to subsidisze music touring – many Australian inner-city acts venture out to these destinations hoping to find conductive performance environments. In this paper, we map the experiences of a number of Melbourne and Brisbane bands – via interviews and case study – as they tour outside of their local/city scenes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Battery-swapping facility planning for electric buses with local charging systems.
- Author
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An, Kun, Jing, Wentao, and Kim, Inhi
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRIC motor buses , *FACILITY management , *ELECTRIC batteries , *BATTERY chargers , *BUSES , *STOCHASTIC models - Abstract
This paper designs a refueling system for battery electric buses (BEBs) by applying battery-swapping technologies together with a local charging system. The service capability of battery-swapping stations (BSSs) is restricted by the number of installed swapping robots. Depleted batteries are charged at BSSs which is equipped with a local charging system having a number of standby batteries and chargers in various types. This study intends to answer four fundamental questions: How many BSSs should be installed? Where should they be? How to assign the depleted electric buses to BSSs? What is the service capability of the BSS? An integer linear program is first formulated to represent the problem with deterministic demand. A two-stage stochastic programing model is then formulated to handle the demand uncertainties, which is then solved by a customized gradient algorithm. The test on a real network of the southeast region of Melbourne in Australia verifies the feasibility of the proposed model and draws managerial insights for the location and configuration of BSSs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
26. Towards good governance of urban greening: insights from four initiatives in Melbourne, Australia.
- Author
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Coffey, Brian, Bush, Judy, Mumaw, Laura, de Kleyn, Lisa, Furlong, Casey, and Cretney, Raven
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL resources management , *LAND tenure , *URBAN heat islands , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
Urban greening can enhance sustainability and liveability, through conserving biodiversity, mitigating urban heat and enhancing people's health and wellbeing. However, urban greening is complex, as it occurs in unique ecological settings, with social, cultural and economic factors shaping the forms it takes. This raises questions about the governance of urban greening, including what counts as 'good governance'. In this paper, we first outline principles of good governance drawn from the natural resource management context. We then present four urban greening initiatives from Melbourne Australia representing different scales, land tenures and organising structures. Following this, we analyse how governance of the four initiatives addresses good governance principles. Our analysis shows that there are diverse ways in which urban greening can be practiced and governed. The importance of more 'informal' initiatives should not be discounted relative to formalised initiatives, as a spectrum of approaches can be seen as strength. Further, in determining what constitutes good governance, the standards against which initiatives are assessed should be tailored to their specific circumstances, and consider impacts to the environment itself. These findings point to good urban greening governance being both situated and principled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
27. Together Here, Now and Forever: Chinese Immigrants' Belonging in Australia, Family, Ethnicity and Memorialisation.
- Author
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Forbes-Mewett, Helen, Han, Gil-Soo, and Yang Wang, Wilfred
- Subjects
- *
CHINESE people , *MEMORIALIZATION , *ETHNICITY , *FAMILIES - Abstract
This paper investigates end-of-life decisions, ethnic influences and memorialisaton of Chinese immigrants in Melbourne, Australia. Drawing on interviews with 41 participants including 25 individuals and 16 community or industry stake holders, we present insights into what this group experiences and how they negotiate end-of-life choices to accommodate their hybrid circumstances as immigrants. We find evidence of merging cultures that suggests a new Chineseness played out in diverse ways. We also found this group of Chinese had acquired a sense of belonging relating to being together with family and friends that they wished to continue beyond their lived experience. Their adopted new home in Australia provided an opportunity to be together now and forever. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Return to Work in Survivors of Human Papillomavirus-Associated Oropharyngeal Cancer: An Australian Experience.
- Author
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Morales, Claudia Zecena, McDowell, Lachlan, Lisy, Karolina, Piper, Amanda, and Jefford, Michael
- Subjects
- *
HEAD & neck cancer , *CANCER , *RADIOTHERAPY , *FUNCTIONAL assessment , *PAPILLOMAVIRUSES , *SICK leave , *SOCIAL support , *CROSS-sectional method , *TIME , *WORK , *OROPHARYNGEAL cancer , *QUALITATIVE research , *EMPLOYMENT , *QUALITY of life , *PAPILLOMAVIRUS diseases , *EMPLOYMENT reentry , *FATIGUE (Physiology) , *RETIREMENT , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: Human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) commonly affects people of working age, yet there is limited data regarding the return-to-work experience in this cohort. This study aimed to investigate the proportion of survivors currently working after completion of radiation therapy and to explore potential facilitators and barriers to working after treatment.Methods: A cross-sectional, single-institutional study was undertaken at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, a comprehensive cancer center in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Eligible participants were 18 to 65 years old at diagnosis, were employed at or within the 3 months before diagnosis, and had completed curative treatment for HPV-associated OPC ≥4 months before enrollment. Participants completed a paper-based survey to assess baseline demographics, employment status, and quality of life (QOL; Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Head and Neck). Open-ended questions explored factors affecting return to work. Associations between current employment status and various disease, treatment, and demographic variables and with QOL were examined. Free-text items were analyzed by summarizing content analysis.Results: Of 93 participants approached, 68 responded (73.1%). Mean age was 54.1 years (range, 39-64 years), and 89.7% were male. Most participants (67.6%) had stage II disease and were treated with chemoradiation (85.3%). Mean time after treatment was 2.6 years (range, 0.3-9.1 years). Fifty-eight of 68 participants (85.3%) were working at enrollment; median time to return to work was 6.0 months (interquartile range, 4-10 months); 45 (77.6%) were in the same role and 35 (60.3%) worked the same number of hours. Ten participants were not working, 3 had retired, 5 reported persistent and significant treatment toxicity preventing employment. Survivors currently working reported higher physical, functional, and global QOL scores. Access to leave and support from treating doctors were facilitators for return to work, whereas fatigue was frequently reported as a barrier to returning to work.Conclusion: With time, the majority of participants with HPV-associated OPC will return to work after radiation therapy. Attention to symptom management and support from the workplace may enable more successful return to work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Resettlement challenges and dilemmas: An in‐depth case study of Bhutanese refugee women in Australia.
- Author
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Parajuli, Jamuna, Horey, Dell, and Avgoulas, Maria‐Irini
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN refugees , *LAND settlement , *PREVENTIVE health services , *CONTENTMENT , *DILEMMA , *FEMININE identity , *CRITICAL thinking - Abstract
In this paper, the perceptions of Bhutanese refugee women were explored in relation to their changing identity and their behavioural responses in the use of preventive health services following resettlement. Interviews with 30 Bhutanese refugee women in Melbourne revealed resettlement drivers, challenges and dilemmas. There was no option for women other than resettlement, women wanted to escape from bad conditions and hopes for a better future for their children was critical in their thinking. Resettlement introduced new unexpected challenges including cultural discontinuity, changed dependency and a sense of not belonging. Dilemmas were apparent in their experiences including: despondency and contentment, gratitude and regret; and identifying as either Australian or refugee. Motherhood was important to women in this study and was challenged by changed dependency with their children in resettlement. Challenges of cultural discontinuity included the impact of communication difficulties and illiteracy and the absence of social connections with neighbours. A better understanding of how changing identities of women interact should lead to more effective strategies including tailored programs and activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Factors associated with vocational disengagement among young people entering mental health treatment.
- Author
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Caruana, Emma, Allott, Kelly, Farhall, John, Parrish, Emma M., Davey, Christopher G., Chanen, Andrew M., Killackey, Eoin, and Cotton, Susan M.
- Subjects
- *
YOUTH , *MENTAL health services , *THERAPEUTICS , *MENTAL illness , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *AGE of onset - Abstract
Aim: Most mental disorders have their onset by age 25, disrupting normative vocational engagement. Factors associated with vocational disengagement at first contact with specialist treatment are important for service planning. The aim of this paper was to investigate the association between theoretically important factors and vocational disengagement for youth entering mental health treatment. Methods: A file audit was used to extract vocational data of 145 young people aged 15 to 25 years entering treatment in 2011 at a public youth mental health service in Melbourne, Australia. Comparisons were made across three specialist programs for: psychosis (n = 50), mood disorders (n = 52) and borderline personality pathology (n = 43). Individual characteristics were entered into univariate and multivariate logistic regressions to investigate their associations with vocational disengagement. Results: Educational disengagement was associated with being older (OR = 4.38, P = 0.004) and not living with parents (OR = 2.87, P = 0.038). Unemployment and being NEET (Not in Education, Employment or Training) were both associated with not having commenced tertiary education (OR = 0.23, P = 0.022; OR = 0.05, P = 0.002; respectively). Being NEET was also associated with being older (OR = 6.18, P = 0.004). Primary diagnostic grouping was not associated with vocational disengagement, once accounting for other factors. Conclusions: The likelihood of vocational disengagement did not differ across disorder groups, implying that intervention should be "transdiagnostic" and might best target education first, specifically post‐secondary qualifications. Other domains or variables not measured in this study are also likely to be important, and this might include young people's support systems and symptom severity. Qualitative studies may be useful for exploring further factors relevant to vocational engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Surrogate‐based toll optimization in a large‐scale heterogeneously congested network.
- Author
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Gu, Ziyuan, Waller, S. Travis, and Saberi, Meead
- Subjects
- *
SURROGATE-based optimization , *TRAFFIC assignment , *TIME travel , *TRAFFIC incident management , *TOLLS , *PRICE regulation , *KRIGING - Abstract
Toll optimization in a large‐scale dynamic traffic network is typically characterized by an expensive‐to‐evaluate objective function. In this paper, we propose two toll‐level problems (TLPs) integrated with a large‐scale simulation‐based dynamic traffic assignment model of Melbourne, Australia. The first TLP aims to control the pricing zone (PZ) through a time‐varying joint distance and delay toll such that the network fundamental diagram (NFD) of the PZ does not enter the congested regime. The second TLP is built upon the first TLP by further considering the minimization of the heterogeneity of congestion distribution in the PZ. To solve the two TLPs, a computationally efficient surrogate‐based optimization method, that is, regressing kriging with expected improvement sampling, is applied to approximate the simulation input–output mapping, which can balance well between local exploitation and global exploration. Results show that the two optimal TLP solutions reduce the average travel time in the PZ (entire network) by 29.5% (1.4%) and 21.6% (2.5%), respectively. Reducing the heterogeneity of congestion distribution achieves higher network flows in the PZ and a lower average travel time or a larger total travel time saving in the entire network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The power of feminist pedagogy in Australia: vagina shorts and the primary prevention of violence against women.
- Author
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Ollis, Debbie
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN'S studies , *VIOLENCE prevention , *VIOLENCE against women , *CLASSROOM activities , *STUDENT attitudes , *FEMINISM , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper examines the challenges of using feminist pedagogies in the development of school-based interventions to address Violence Against Women in Sexuality and Relationships Education in Australia. The focus of the paper is a feminist-based classroom program developed by a group of teachers, which was piloted in three secondary schools in Melbourne. The paper uses interview data from the teachers who taught in the program as well as the students who completed it to explore the feminist discourses embedded in the key program resources. The analysis shows that the program draws heavily on liberal and radical feminist approaches, both perceived by many gender scholars as having limited understandings of gender by comparison with post-modern approaches. The data also indicate that these approaches have the potential to elicit powerful responses from students, raising their awareness of sexism, objectification and sexual safety. The paper concludes by arguing that, while many scholars see post-modern approaches as conceptually superior, they are in practice extremely difficult to operationalize and therefore of limited practical use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Transforming transport planning in the postpolitical era.
- Author
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Legacy, Crystal
- Subjects
- *
URBAN transportation , *TUNNELS , *METROPOLITAN government , *PUBLIC transit , *GOVERNMENT policy ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to examine how the postpolitical era of planning has created both binaries and intersections in the reimaging of transport futures and how the latter precipitates a redefinition of democratic transport prioritisation. Focusing particularly on the point in the transport planning process when urban transport priorities are identified, the paper explores how citizens respond to the inherently political, yet not always democratic, aspects of setting transport investment priorities. This relationship is investigated through a single case study of Melbourne, Australia where a six km inner city road tunnel was deemed a ‘done deal’ by elected officials in the lead up to a state election, removing the controversial project from open public scrutiny. Drawing upon ethnographic research and semi-structured interviews with community campaigners opposing the proposed East West Link road tunnel, this analysis reveals how community-based groups and individual residents alike can evolve beyond NIMBY-focused agitation to garner a spatially dispersed re-politicisation of urban transport priorities. While the postpolitical framing of infrastructure delivery introduces a binary between state interventionist planning and citizen opposition, it is the mobilisation of action through the spaces of intersection where new political paradigms for transport planning are created. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Outer metropolitan areas and infrastructure deficits: Policy dynamics on the edge of Melbourne, Australia.
- Author
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Henderson, Steven R.
- Subjects
- *
METROPOLITAN areas , *INFRASTRUCTURE policy , *POPULATION , *ECONOMICS , *CITY dwellers , *STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas - Abstract
Rapid urban population growth promotes the outward expansion of cities and strengthens demand for outer metropolitan infrastructure. In a practical sense, creating sustainable greenfield communities is problematic given the expensive, multidimensional nature of infrastructure. Inwardly-looking metropolitan imaginaries can result. Although urban political economy perspectives acknowledge variability in local public-private sector relations, thereby raising the prospect of developer obligations, the latter are not without limited. To further strengthen understanding of sub-national government capacities and outer metropolitan infrastructure policy, additional institutionalist interpretations are necessary. Alongside or in between the limits of developer contributions and ad hoc public funding streams, this paper confirms the importance of extended policy perspectives by identifying and evaluating three state level policy responses on the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia: spatially designated funding, public private partnerships (PPPs) and community infrastructure brokers. • Large scale expansion on Melbourne's edge, plus multidimensional infrastructure deficits as identified by council officers • The importance of institutionally sensitive urban political economy perspectives for interpreting infrastructure deficits • The importance of investigating outer metropolitan policy dynamics beyond developer contributions • Three emerging policies: spatially designated funding, public private partnerships and infrastructure community brokers • The need to further investigate sub-national local–state government relations given partial responses [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Australian infection control in endoscopy consensus statements on carbapenemase‐producing Enterobacteriaceae.
- Author
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Devereaux, Benedict M, Athan, Eugene, Brown, Robyn R, Greig, Sue M, Jones, Dianne M, Bailey, Fiona K, Wallis, David J, and Singh, Rajvinder
- Subjects
- *
INFECTION prevention , *ENTEROBACTERIACEAE , *ENTEROBACTERIACEAE diseases , *CONSENSUS (Social sciences) , *REFERENCE sources - Abstract
Outbreaks of carbapenemase‐producing Enterobacteriaceae clinical infections related to endoscopic transmission are well documented. The high morbidity and mortality associated with these infections emphasizes the need to reassess endoscopic reprocessing protocols. The Gastroenterological Society of Australia established a multi‐society committee to formulate evidence‐based consensus statements on the prevention and management of endoscopic transmission of carbapenemase‐producing Enterobacteriaceae. A literature search was undertaken utilizing the MEDLINE database. Further references were sourced from published paper bibliographies. Nine statements were formulated. Using the Delphi methodology, the statements were initially reviewed electronically by the committee members and subsequently at a face‐to‐face meeting in Melbourne, Australia. After further discussion, four additional sub‐statements were added resulting in a total of 13 statements. Each statement was assessed for level of evidence, recommendation grade and the voting on recommendation was recorded. For a statement to be accepted, five out of six committee members had to "accept completely" or "accept with some reservation." All 13 statements achieved consensus agreement. Eleven statements achieved 100% "accepted completely." Two statements were 83% "accepted completely" and 17% "accepted with some reservation." Of particular significance, automated flexible endoscope reprocessors were mandated for high‐level disinfection, and the use of forced‐air drying cabinets was mandated for endoscope storage. These evidence‐based statements encourage preventative strategies with the aim of ensuring the highest possible standards in flexible endoscope reprocessing thereby optimizing patient safety. They must be considered in addition to the broader published guidelines on infection control in endoscopy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Social change and community cohesion: an ethnographic study of two Melbourne suburbs.
- Author
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Colic-Peisker, Val and Robertson, Shanthi
- Subjects
- *
ETHNOLOGY , *SUBURBS , *COMMUNITIES , *SOCIAL change , *SOCIAL cohesion , *CULTURAL pluralism , *GENTRIFICATION , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper looks comparatively at the process of social change and its impact on local community cohesion in two Melbourne suburbs, ‘Northburb’ and ‘Greenburb’. The two localities are geographically close, part of the same local government area and both highly ethnically diverse, but considerably different in terms of their socio-economic and ethnic profiles. Based on ethnographic data collected through individual interviews, focus groups and participant observation in 2012–2013, the paper shows how the process of deindustrialization and the switch to service economy over the past decades took distinctly different turns in the two localities. Our data suggest that the processes of social change seem to have diminished local community cohesion in both localities. In Northburb, gentrification has contributed to socio-economic polarization, while Greenburb has lagged behind in socio-economic indicators and experienced ethnic fragmentation due to a considerable influx of new immigrant groups. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Other Side of the Coin: Subsurface Deposits at the Former Royal Melbourne Mint.
- Author
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Travers, Ian
- Subjects
- *
HISTORIC buildings , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location , *AIR pollution , *URBAN history , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The Melbourne branch of the Royal Mint officially opened in 1872. Built on a site that had previously accommodated Melbourne’s original Exhibition Hall, the complex comprised the extant Administration Building and flanking Guardhouses and substantial “operative departments” to the rear. The latter were demolished in the early 1970s but recent investigations have revealed that substantial remains survive. This paper discusses our new appreciation of the Mint’s archaeology – one of an increasing number of Melbourne archaeological sites where subsurface deposits are supplementing our knowledge of places long acknowledged for the importance of their built heritage. The remains reveal important evidence relating to the minting process and responses to industrial urban air pollution in the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Langlands Iron Foundry, Flinders Street, Melbourne.
- Author
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Myers, Sarah, Mirams, Sarah, and Mallett, Tom
- Subjects
- *
IRON foundries , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location , *HISTORIC gardens , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Langlands Iron Foundry was an early and significant industrial operation in Victoria, responsible for assembling the first iron paddle steamer and making the first locomotive boiler in the colony. Remains of the foundry were uncovered in June 2014 during an archaeological program preceding development of a site in Flinders Street in Melbourne. The site was located on the remains of a garden created by John Batman, one of the two “founders” of Melbourne in 1835 and was superseded by a commercial shipping butcher in 1864. In this paper we present archaeological and historical evidence relating to the garden and iron foundry to illuminate important aspects of working life and conditions in early Melbourne. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The City Revealed: Reflections on 25 Years of Archaeology in Melbourne. Lessons from the Past and Future Challenges.
- Author
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Smith, Jeremy
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL archaeology , *HISTORIC sites , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *HISTORY - Abstract
In 2016, the 150th historical archaeology project was conducted in the central city area of Melbourne. Almost all of these investigations have been undertaken since the introduction of the Victorian
Heritage Act 1995 . With the Act recently under review, it is timely to look back on the lessons learned by heritage managers and archaeologists over the last 25 years. It is also an opportunity to review current practices to ensure that future site investigations are conducted efficiently and achieve meaningful outcomes. How can information obtained from the previous 150 projects inform and enhance the research frameworks of future work? What can we learn about Melbourne’s historical archaeology that we do not already know? How can community benefits be optimized? This paper will evaluate the successes and failures associated with the implementation of historical archaeology legislation in an urban setting and consider how the past 25 years of archaeology in the city can inform our approach to future opportunities in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Long run urban analysis using property records: A methodological case study of land use change.
- Author
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Hurley, Joe, Wood, Gavin, and Groenhart, Lucy
- Subjects
- *
LAND use , *URBAN history , *REAL property sales & prices , *LAND tenure , *HOME ownership , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper demonstrates the contribution that historical property records can make to our understanding of long run urban change. We use a case study of two streets from the suburb of Carlton in Melbourne, Australia between 1870 and 1970. The property records form a panel database that can be interrogated using standard modelling techniques. These data are used to analyse change in the built environment over time, and identify the factors that may be influencing such change. With the assembled data we track built form, land value, ownership and land use over 100 years. We find that stability characterises the built environment over lengthy periods, but when change occurs it does so in bursts, rather than incrementally. Furthermore, these bursts of change are unevenly spread across our two case study streets, despite their proximity. The streetscape’s primary built material is the key factor shaping geographical patterns of land use change in the case study area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Key concepts for Integrated Urban Water Management infrastructure planning: Lessons from Melbourne.
- Author
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Furlong, Casey, Brotchie, Ryan, Considine, Robert, Finlayson, Greg, and Guthrie, Lachlan
- Subjects
- *
MUNICIPAL water supply , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *ENERGY consumption , *CLIMATE change , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
“Integrated Urban Water Management plans” consider all water services simultaneously to determine optimal infrastructure solutions. They create many benefits, including unlocking opportunities for water reuse. This paper conducts preliminary assessment of nine IUWM plan case studies from Melbourne. It finds inconsistencies between plans in relation to environmental and liveability objectives, and option identification methods, and also that many IUWM options perform worse than conventional water supplies in regards to energy. The most consequential finding is that the plans do not include scenario planning and therefore fail to consider infrastructure performance regarding resilience to future uncertainties around population and climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Further examination of the reducing transition rate in ultra high risk for psychosis samples: The possible role of earlier intervention.
- Author
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Nelson, B., Yuen, H.P., Lin, A., Wood, S.J., McGorry, P.D., Hartmann, J.A., and Yung, A.R.
- Subjects
- *
EARLY medical intervention , *COHORT analysis , *SYMPTOMS , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *ANALYSIS of variance , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MEDICAL care , *PATIENTS , *PSYCHOSES , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *TIME , *RELATIVE medical risk , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DISEASE progression , *EARLY diagnosis , *PREVENTION ,PSYCHOSES risk factors - Abstract
Background: The rate of transition to psychotic disorder in ultra high risk (UHR) patients has declined in recent cohorts. The reasons for this are unclear, but may include a lead-time bias, earlier intervention, a change in clinical characteristics of cohorts, and treatment changes.Aims: In this paper we examined the two possibilities related to reduction in duration of symptoms prior to clinic entry, i.e., lead-time bias and earlier intervention.Method: The sample consisted of all UHR research participants seen at the PACE clinic, Melbourne between 1993 and 2006 (N=416), followed for a mean of 7.5years (the 'PACE 400' cohort). Duration of symptoms was analysed by four baseline year time periods. Analysis of transition rate by duration of symptoms was restricted to more homogenous sub-samples (pre-1998 and pre-2001) in order to minimize confounding effects of change in patient characteristics or treatments. These cohorts were divided into those with a short and long duration of symptoms using a cut-point approach.Results: Duration of symptoms prior to entry did not reduce significantly between 1993 and 2006 (p=0.10). The group with a short duration of symptoms showed lower transition rates and did not catch up in transition rate compared to the long duration of symptoms group.Discussion: These data suggest that, while earlier intervention or lead-time bias do not fully account for the declining transition rate in UHR cohorts, it appears that earlier intervention may have exerted a stronger influence on this decline than length of follow-up period (lead-time bias). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The effect of primary midwife-led care on women's experience of childbirth: results from the COSMOS randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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McLachlan, HL, Forster, DA, Davey, M‐A, Farrell, T, Flood, M, Shafiei, T, and Waldenström, U
- Subjects
- *
CHILDBIRTH , *MIDWIFERY , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *LABOR pain (Obstetrics) , *PUBLIC health , *LABOR (Obstetrics) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DELIVERY (Obstetrics) , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PATIENT satisfaction , *PRIMARY health care , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: To determine the effect of primary midwife-led care ('caseload midwifery') on women's experiences of childbirth.Design: Randomised controlled trial.Setting: Tertiary care women's hospital in Melbourne, Australia.Population: A total of 2314 low-risk pregnant women.Methods: Women randomised to caseload care received antenatal, intrapartum and postpartum care from a primary midwife, with some care provided by a 'back-up' midwife. Women in standard care received midwifery-led care with varying levels of continuity, junior obstetric care or community-based medical care.Main Outcome Measures: The primary outcome of the study was caesarean section. This paper presents a secondary outcome, women's experience of childbirth. Women's views and experiences were sought using seven-point rating scales via postal questionnaires 2 months after the birth.Results: A total of 2314 women were randomised between September 2007 and June 2010; 1156 to caseload and 1158 to standard care. Response rates to the follow-up questionnaire were 88 and 74%, respectively. Women in the caseload group were more positive about their overall birth experience than women in the standard care group (adjusted odds ratio 1.50, 95% CI 1.22-1.84). They also felt more in control during labour, were more proud of themselves, less anxious, and more likely to have a positive experience of pain.Conclusions: Compared with standard maternity care, caseload midwifery may improve women's experiences of childbirth.Tweetable Abstract: Primary midwife-led care ('caseload midwifery') improves women's experiences of childbirth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Valuing the improvement of a decommissioned heritage site to a multifunctional water sensitive greenspace.
- Author
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Iftekhar, Md Sayed, Polyakov, Maksym, and Rogers, Abbie
- Subjects
- *
HISTORIC sites , *MUNICIPAL water supply , *WILLINGNESS to pay , *ENVIRONMENTAL quality , *VALUE capture - Abstract
In this paper, we assess residents' preferences for different options of large-scale water sensitive urban improvement of a heritage site in Melbourne, the Main Outfall Sewer (MOS) reserve. We use a hedonic pricing analysis and a discrete choice experiment to understand the benefits associated with improving the MOS reserve. We find that there are significant non-market benefits associated with various options, both in terms of the potential to reflect increases in house value and in terms of people's willingness to pay for improvements in amenity and environmental quality. This information will contribute to determining investment options for this important heritage site. Importantly, we demonstrate the combination of the hedonic and stated choice willingness to pay estimates to provide an aggregate estimate of welfare, revealing a useful approach for greenspace valuation applications where multiple non-market values should be considered. • Non-market valuation of improvement options for a decommissioned heritage site in Melbourne. • Hedonic analysis to capture use values of residents living adjacent to the site. • Complementary choice experiment to capture use and non-use values of residents. • An aggregation method proposed to combine values from both methods. • The aggregate benefit of a high-level upgrade could be as high as $152 million (AUD). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A tale of two advertising cities: Sydney suits v. Melbourne creatives.
- Author
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Crawford, Robert
- Subjects
- *
ADVERTISING , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *MARKETING strategy - Abstract
This paper examines the advertising industries in both Sydney and Melbourne and the development of a truly national industry from the 1920s to the 1980s. The relationship between the two cities has been largely complementary rather than confrontational, with Sydney's business acumen complemented by Melbourne's creativity. However, the growing concentration of business in Sydney would see its agencies and their client-focused culture emerge as the dominant partner in the two-city relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Enacting Resilience: A Performative Account of Governing for Urban Resilience.
- Author
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Wagenaar, Hendrik and Wilkinson, Cathy
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL resilience , *URBAN policy , *BIODIVERSITY , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *ENVIRONMENTAL management , *CITIES & towns & the environment - Abstract
Resilience is an increasingly important urban policy discourse that has been taken up at a rapid pace. Yet there is an apparent gap between the advocacy of social-ecological resilience in scientific literature and its take-up in policy discourse on the one hand, and the demonstrated capacity to govern for resilience in practice on the other. This paper explores this gap by developing a performative account of how social-ecological resilience is dealt with in practice through case study analysis of how protection of biodiversity was negotiated in response to Melbourne’s recent metropolitan planning initiative. It is suggested that a performative account expands the possible opportunities for governing for social-ecological resilience beyond the concept’s use as a metaphor, measurement, cognitive frame or programmatic statement of adaptive management/co-management and has the potential to emerge through what has been called the everyday ‘mangle of practice’ in response to social-ecological feedback inherent to policy processes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. NOT ALL SMOOTH SAILING: BARRIERS TO SMALL BUSINESS SUCCESS FOR OWNER/MANAGERS FROM MIDDLE EASTERN COMMUNITIES INMELBOURNE.
- Author
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Pitrus, Widad
- Subjects
- *
ENTREPRENEURSHIP , *ARABS , *SMALL business , *ECONOMIC history ,FOREIGN countries - Abstract
There has been very little international research on Arab entrepreneurs from the Middle East, who began to land on American shores during the late 1880s and on other parts of the world for decades. Little attention has also been given to Arab entrepreneurs from the Middle East, who began to land on Australian shores during the late 1860s, and who have been greatly contributing to the Australian economy and cultural diversity for almost 150 years. Thus, in an attempt to fill the gap, this paper investigates barriers to small business success, using a sample of Middle Eastern communities in Melbourne, Australia, specifically the Lebanese, Egyptian and Iraqi communities, the three largest in the state of Victoria with developed community infrastructures. Unfortunately, a list of the total target population did not conveniently exist for sampling purposes; and it was impractical to compile such a list, therefore, cluster sampling was utilized, particularly, area sampling, as geographic areas were identified. For pragmatic reasons, and to enhance representativeness of the sample, PPS technique was used to identify the proportion of each sample for each community for interviews. Thus, around ten per cent (n=16) in proportion to the total number of working population (N=165) were subsequently interviewed. Individual in-depth, semi-structured and audiotaped interviews were conducted using a list of open-ended questions relating to the barriers to business success. Interviews were manually content-analyzed using conventional content analysis and constant comparative methods. Thus, the analysis of participants' comments reflected the following barriers to business success: (i) dealing with difficult people; (ii) loss of support sources; (iii) personal idiosyncrasies of the owner/managers; (iv) financial barriers; (v) lack of specific business experience; and (vi) others. The analysis of participants' comments also indicated that dealing with difficult people as a barrier to business success was further analysed into (A) extended family, friends and people from own community, (B) employees and (C) customers, the other five barriers could not be analysed further. Quotations and excerpts from interviews were used to facilitate understanding interviewees' points of view, as well as to illustrate and support each the first and the second levels of analysis for each of the barriers. This study lies in its contribution to academic literature, and its results should improve understanding of entrepreneurial behavioral patterns through the development of teaching and training programs, which can assist government and relevant bodies in introducing public policy that helps improve entrepreneurs' success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Transition to low carbon? An analysis of socio-technical change in housing renovation.
- Author
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Horne, Ralph and Dalton, Tony
- Subjects
- *
HOUSING & the environment , *DOMESTIC architecture , *HOUSE construction , *BUILDING repair , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *ENVIRONMENTAL responsibility , *URBAN policy - Abstract
Across the westernised world, concerns about climate change and resource scarcity point to the need for widescale changes in housing renovation. Through the exploration of social interactions of eco-renovation businesses on the ground, the paper presents evidence for the emergence of an ‘eco-renovation niche’ consisting of both traditional and new types of housing industry businesses. However, this niche is not clearly bounded, stable or homogenous, and so generalised ideas about how it may grow in scale or size are problematic. Niche participants typically wish to stay small. Also, complex household relations are involved, and hands-on experimentation is a feature of the industry participants. For policy purposes, this suggests a need to focus on strategic intermediaries in industry and professional associations, licensing bodies and regulators, who could in turn support programmes that more adequately recognise the modus operandi of the industry, households and civil society organisations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Combatting antisemitism in the school playground: an Australian case study.
- Author
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Gross, Zehavit and Rutland, Suzanne D.
- Subjects
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ANTISEMITISM , *SCHOOL bullying , *JEWISH children , *JEWS , *STEREOTYPES - Abstract
The aim of Gross and Rutland's paper is to analyse the problem of antisemitic bullying in contemporary Australian state schools by investigating the case of Jewish children in those schools. The study is interdisciplinary, drawing on historical data and educational methodology, and employs a qualitative approach through semi-structured interviews conducted in Sydney and Melbourne with all the major actors: students (55), teachers (10), principals (4), parents (13) and Jewish communal leaders (10). Gross and Rutland argue that classical anti-Jewish stereotypes are perpetuated in the school playground, transmitted by children from one generation to the next. This finding provides an additional perspective to the general literature, which argues that racial prejudice and stereotypes are acquired primarily through home socialization, religious institutions and the media, and neglects the role of the school playground. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Does social mix reduce stigma in public housing? A comparative analysis of two housing estates in Melbourne.
- Author
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Raynor, Kate, Panza, Laura, Ordóñez, Camilo, Adamovic, Mladen, and Wheeler, Melissa A.
- Subjects
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PLANNED communities , *SOCIAL stigma , *PUBLIC housing , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL systems , *URBAN planning , *HOUSING - Abstract
In Australia and many other countries of the Global North, public housing estates are being dismantled and redeveloped to create mixed-income communities. Proponents of redevelopment argue that the introduction of private housing will reduce public housing residents' experiences of stigma. In this paper, we interrogate these assumptions by identifying the degree of stigma directed at the social housing system, the characteristics of those most likely to stigmatise, the impact of proximity to public housing estates on stigmatisation and the words used to describe social housing. Our empirical strategy relies on a multi-dimensional social housing stigma scale, cross-sectional ordinary-least-square regression analysis and a qualitative analysis of respondents' association with the term public housing. We find that a higher level of stigma is correlated with private residents, older respondents, lower incomes and those that have lived in their current neighbourhoods for longer. Drawing on social contact theory, we investigate contact with public housing residents as a predictor of stigmatisation. We find that intra-group contact, positive interactions between social and private residents and proximity to Kensington Estate, a mixed-tenure development, contribute to lower stigmatisation. • Contact with social housing tenants per se is not associated with reduced stigma. • Positive interactions with social housing residents reduce stigmatisation. • Social housing stigma decreases with proximity to a mixed-tenure development. • Individual characteristics influence stigma towards social housing residents. • Support for social diversity is more impactful than proximity to public housing estates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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