Conference
Owning Institution
The State of Australian Cities (SOAC) national conferences have been held biennially since 2003 to support interdisciplinary policy-related urban research. This third conference was jointly hosted in Adelaide by the University of South Australia, the University of Adelaide and Flinders University.
Papers from all past and subsequent SOAC conferences can be found at the State of Australian Cities Conferences Collection on APO.
SOAC 3 focused on the contemporary form and structure of Australian cities and refereed papers were grouped into six key sub-themes:
- City Economy - economic change and labour market outcomes of globalisation, land use pressures, changing employment locations.
- Social City – including population, migration, immigration, polarisation, equity and disadvantage, housing issues, recreation.
- City Environment - sustainable development, management and performance, natural resource management, limits to growth, impacts of air, water, climate, energy consumption, natural resource uses, conservation, green space.
- City Structures – the emerging morphology of the city – inner suburbs, middle suburbs, the CBD, outer suburbs and the urban-rural fringe, the city region.
- City Governance – including taxation, provision of urban services, public policy formation, planning, urban government, citizenship and the democratic process.
- City Infrastructure – transport, mobility, accessibility, communications and IT, and other urban infrastructure provision.
Conference paper
Darwin as 'Creative Tropical City': just how transferable is creative city thinking?
This paper contributes to recent debates about how urban policy discourses travel, whether they are transferable and what is lost in their translation.
Conference paper
Beyond triple bottom line - Sustainable Cities RD&D at CSIRO
This paper presents the goals, underlying principles and framework, and the research, development and demonstration/delivery (RD&D) activities of the Sustainable Cities research theme at CSIRO, emphasising its focus on inter-disciplinary and integrated approaches to address urban sustainability issues.
Conference paper
A holistic approach to studying segregation in Australian cities
This paper argues that research on segregation has had an over-reliance on statistical measures of outcomes, which limits our understanding of segregation processes and impacts.
Conference paper
Can Australian cities learn from a 'Great Planning Success'?
This paper draws out the lessons for Australasian cities from the Vancouver success story, by examining the policies and actions taken in the areas of transport, urban consolidation and development regulation.
Conference paper
Integrating population, land-use, transport, water and energy-use models to improve the sustainability of urban systems
This paper describes the thinking used to develop an integrated urban systems model of transport and domestic dwelling energy-use in association with domestic water-use.