Conference

The State of Australian Cities (SOAC) national conferences have been held biennially since 2003 to support interdisciplinary policy-related urban research. SOAC 2 was hosted by the Urban Research Program at the South Bank campus, Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University.

The principal theme of SOAC 2 was the sustainability and vulnerability of Australian cities. Providing a place of dialogue between leading researchers on the state of Australian cities and where they might be headed, SOAC 2 brought together participants from a wide range of fields, including: academics, researchers, policy makers, private and public sector practitioners, leaders in government, social commentators and the media.

Papers from all past and subsequent SOAC conferences can be found at the State of Australian Cities Conferences Collection on APO.

Conference paper

Community safety indicators: 'What works, what doesn't, what is promising'


Specifically, the paper focuses on community safety indicators as an evaluation tool for local government policies and programs.
Conference paper

SoE what? Has ten years or more of SoE reporting across Australia created or contributed to any environmental improvements or outcomes?


NSW is the only State where local councils have a statutory requirement to prepare annual state of the environment reports. This presentation attempts to outline practitioner’s experiences in SoE reporting, its success or otherwise in delivering on the interpretations of the statutory and non statutory reporting provisions and on the range of outcomes that make...
Conference paper

Global space or local place? The Port Adelaide waterfront redevelopment and entrepreneurial urban governance


The impending waterfront redevelopment of Port Adelaide is a local manifestation of a global phenomenon. Through a carefully managed place marketing process, the Port’s industrial landscape is to be reconceptualized as a future landscape of cosmopolitan consumption and professional occupancy.
Conference paper

The effectiveness of strategies for crime reduction in areas of public housing concentration


Vulnerability to crime is a common problem on large public housing estates, and therefore a key issue in the public housing estate regeneration programs that have emerged in all states of Australian in the last decade.
Conference paper

How should housing densities be determined? A comparative analysis of Brisbane and Copenhagen


What housing densities should we aim for? The determinants of housing densities can be thought of as either internal or external to habitation.