All Publications

This study analyses how an organisation of people who have experienced multiple disadvantage enabled co-production within services and systems, to understand how people can be best supported and how involvement impacts them.
This paper investigates the application, design, and economic feasibility of prefabricated construction in Australian low-rise housing, with a focus on affordability and labour shortages.
This study’s findings suggest that provincial governments may have adopted foreign buyer taxes as a political expediency to signal government action on the housing crisis while sidestepping structural drivers of unaffordability in their housing markets.
This article explores the potential of co-design to facilitate an imagining of ontological security when designing safe, long-term and affordable housing with women who have experienced homelessness.
This study seeks to deepen understanding of the ethical tensions and emotional and embodied labor inherent in the work of service providers who work with pregnant and/or parenting women who are homeless, while advocating for structural reforms that support both client outcomes and provider well-being.
A secondary analysis of qualitative research data using the theory of ontological security to explore the question: How do older adults experience trauma across the transition to housing following homelessness?
This viewpoint presents a recent discussion paper written by Australian Planners, some who identify as having different disabilities, as a way to start discussion on planning guidance for disability equity and inclusion.
This study investigates the impacts, challenges, and opportunities presented by recent global events on the Australian construction sector and its supply chains, and seeks to offer valuable guidance for policymakers, industry stakeholders, and researchers while navigating the current landscape.