31 research outputs found
Housing and infrastructure for indigenous Australians
If Australia had carried out a quinquennial census in 1776 or a survey of Australian housing in 1777 it is almost certain that all of the dwellings would have been classified as ‘improvised’ (Ross, 1987, especially Chapter 3), and any inventory of physical infrastructure would have shown it to be absent. By 1994, the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Survey (NATSIS), the most careful inventory of Indigenous households1 ever conducted, recorded only 2 per cent of their dwellings as improvised, though some of the 6 per cent ‘other’ and ‘not stated’ dwellings may have been of the same kind. But not many, because 95 per cent of dwellings had a bathroom or shower, 96 per cent running water, 96 per cent electricity or gas, 96 per cent at least one toilet and 82 per cent were on a sealed road (ABS, 1996). On the face of it this is a remarkable improvement in the housing of Indigenous Australians, but it has brought problems as well as benefits. Even after a more detailed investigation, it represents a remarkable transformation. Some of the change has occurred as a result of Indigenous people moving into conventional housing in towns and cities. This paper concentrates on the period since the 1960s and on the northern parts of Australia where many people lived traditional lifestyles until recent decades. Especially in the past twenty years there has been a transformation in the living conditions of Indigenous people in the north, including those in rural and remote areas. None of which is to deny that severe problems remain with Indigenous housing.Australian Policy Online (APO)'s Linked Data II project, funded by the Australian Research Council, with partners at the ANU Library, Swinburne University and RMIT
A tale of two cities : public land ownership in Canberra and Stockholm
Public ownership and development of land is a powerful means of controlling the development of an urban area, avoiding high speculative costs of land for housing and public purposes, and siphoning increases in land values that accompany urban growth into the public purse. In Stockholm and Canberra, the balance between these three objectives in the use of public land has differed over time. Control of development has become dominant in Canberra while financial objectives have continued to be important in Stockholm. Whereas public ownership and leasehold tenure of developed land have been used by Stockholm City Council as a means of maintaining a public role in the land market following urban development, the Federal Government in Canberra have done this to a much smaller extent. The City of Stockholm has been an active ground landlord; the Government in Canberra has been almost completely passive, using lease conditions solely as a means of controlling land use. The paper explores historical reasons for the difference between the two cities. Importantly, both the initiative and financial responsibility were taken locally in Stockholm but by the national government in relation to its national capital, Canberra.Australian Policy Online (APO)'s Linked Data II project, funded by the Australian Research Council, with partners at the ANU Library, Swinburne University and RMIT
The costs of urban physical infrastructure services
The traditional methods of funding physical infrastructure - roads, public
transport, water, sewerage, drainage, electricity, gas, telephones and
garbage disposal - have involved varying combinations of loans amortised
from current revenue, property taxes, user charges, access charges,
developer charges, fuel taxes and subsidies from general tax revenue.
These methods of funding have come under pressure in recent years for a
number of reasons: shortages of government capital funds, pressures to
reduce taxes, and attempts to make the funding systems more equitable and
to use it to increase efficiency in the supply of these services and to reduce
their adverse effects on the environment
Achievement of home ownership among post-war Australian cohorts
There has been concern for many years that it has been becoming more
difficult for people to afford to buy a home. Despite this, the proportion of
home owners among Australian households has remained much the same
for some twenty years or more. In part, this is probably because the longterm
rewards from being a home owner have increased at the same time as
the costs of becoming an owner. This paper examines in some detail the
factors which have affected the ability of people to become owners. It uses a
unique set of data which were gathered in a survey which collected
retrospective information about the experience of women and men aged 20
to 60 over their adult life.
The paper shows that more recent cohorts of women have become owners at
younger ages than earlier cohorts. There is limited evidence that, in recent
years, women who worked for a longer time after marriage, and men with
higher incomes and higher occupations, were able to become owners more
quickly. This may point to home ownership becoming increasingly
confined to those on higher incomes, whether from high individual incomes
or from having two incomes in household
Leasehold policies and land use planning in Canberra
With self-government, a worldwide reputation as a beautiful, planned city,
and a stable base of people and jobs, Canberra has achieved much. The time has
come, not only for birthday congratulations, but also for a look to the future. In
particular, we ask how the public sector-now the Australian Capital Territory
(ACT) Government-should participate in the growth and development of this
future Canberra? More specifically, given the fact that all land is publicly owned
and leased to private users, how could the ACT Government best manage this
asset
Planning as urban management : a critical assessment
A long-standing debaJe over the nature and merits of 'rational
comprehensive' versus 'incrementalist' models of public decision-making
is continued in the papers on their application to planning by Max Neutze
andlohnMant.
Neutze reviews the post-war optomistic rise of comprehensive
planning, and its subsequent replacement by more modest 'urban
management' strategies in the wake of its apparent failure to 'deliver the
goods'. During the 1960s and 1970s, there was a growing perception of
the planning process as inherently political, of end-state planning as
inflexible and bureaucratic, of collective action as less beneficial socially
and economical}y than individual, and of the inability of planning to
substantially affect the lot of the poor. This perception led to the
development of minimalist and prophylactic planning strategies and a retreat
from bold and visionary planning approaches which require sufficient
determination to allow long-term decision-making.
Master planning assumes the lead should be taken by a planning
authority with a comprehensive view of all parts of the system.
I ncrementalist approaches implicitly accept the leading role of the private
sector despite possible detriments, especially in the area of service
provision efficiency. The shift to urban management allows flexible
responses to individual decisions, a characteristic particularly useful in the
area of environmental and amenity protection, but it sacrifices the benefits
of continuing commitments to a choosen alternative. The gains inflexibility
which come with the kind of urban management which is less oriented to a
long-term vision will necessarily be accompanied by losses in efficiency
through less effective coordination between different investment decisions,
and an inability to consider large scale alternatives in patterns of
development.
Mant argues that urban management is not an instrument of planning.
Plan-making is an instrument of urban management. Plans are needed from
time to time for particular purposes. It is a mistake to conceive of
'planning' as a simple lineal progression from plan to implementation.
Further, 'planning' and 'urban management' should not be conceived as
competing approaches to urban public poliq. The making of plans should
be seen as a public policy tool for the achievement of del{berate and, at
times, quite limited objectives.
This paper discusses the role and limitations of plan-making as an urban
management tool. The traditional comprehensive end-state planning
exercise suffers from the same deficiencies as a public policy tool as other
rational comprehensive policy activities.The instruments of planning : urban management by John Mant / Planning as urban management : a critical assessment by Max Neutze