Conference

The State of Australian Cities (SOAC) national conferences have been held biennially since 2003 to support interdisciplinary policy-related urban research. SOAC 5 was held in Melbourne and hosted by the University of Melbourne, RMIT University, Monash University, Swinburne University of Technology and Latrobe University as well as the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute and the Grattan Institute, the Victorian State Government and the City of Melbourne.

Three plenary panels brought researchers from across the country to address ‘big issues’: place-based disadvantage, the design and form of Australian cities, and metropolitan governance. Over 175 papers, in 46 themed sessions, cover topics ranging from planning and governance for environmental sustainability, to housing affordability and adequacy in the context of an ageing population. Healthy communities, better public transport, high quality open space, participatory planning, and issues affecting the peri-urban fringe are also strong sub-themes within this conference. All published papers have been subject to a peer reviewing process.

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

Conference paper

All cities are different: moving creative workforce research forward to a new specificity


The cultural sector and its workforce are often positioned as economic drivers, and important themes within this discourse have included relationships between the cultural sector and human capital, urban regeneration, community engagement, branding, and image. This paper, the second in a series that examine specific elements of creative work, considers spatiality with specific reference to...
Conference paper

Governing the Australian megalopolis - The challenge of the 200km city (and beyond)


This paper examines the notion of megalopolis - not as a geographically specific US spatial context or economic development trajectory model premised on the notion that ‘big is better’ - but rather as a heuristic for thinking about the governance implications of complex new Australian spatial.
Conference paper

Planned spatial restructuring of Australian cities: are the transport benefits of employment decentralisation policies greater than those of transit-oriented development?


This paper explores whether the transport benefits of planned employment decentralisation policies are greater than those of residential TOD, to help gauge whether Australian planners should give support to the decentralisation agenda.
Conference paper

The role of discourse in the construction of place: a case study of master planned estates in the Lower Hunter Region


This paper presents a piece of research from a broader project that explores the processes involved in the creation of “successful” new suburban development. Part of this involves exploring the way relationships might be conceptualised, valued and practiced in master planned estates.