This paper adopts a socioeconomic and policy systems approach to housing tenure patterns. It argues that the housing tenure system in more densely settled Australia, dominated by home ownership, does not fully penetrate to remote areas for either Indigenous or other households. It uses data from the 2001 Census organised by remoteness geography to demonstrate this lack of penetration, and attempts to describe the housing tenure system in remote Australia in its own terms. The paper begins and ends by specifically looking at ideas about promoting home ownership in remote Aboriginal communities. It argues that this is a largely unrealistic policy goal, given the underlying income and employment status of Indigenous people in these communities...
In August 2001 three CAEPR researchers, each based in a different community, observed the conduct of...
Within the framework of the Council for Australian Governments (COAG) requirements for benchmarking ...
This paper examines trends across a number of socioeconomic outcomes for Indigenous Australians from...
Australia’s Northern Territory has three categories of local government referred to as municipal, co...
There is a compelling need for fresh perspective on the policy implications of Indigenous demographi...
This paper attempts to identify the key challenges facing Indigenous people and governments in resha...
One of the most important programs for Indigenous community and economic development is the Communit...
The West Kimberley is the latest region in Western Australia poised to reap huge benefits from a sup...
The announcement by the Australian and Western Australian governments of funding for Stage 2 of the ...
This document brings together four papers on Indigenous community governance which were written as v...
The successes and failures of interventions to close the disadvantage gap for remote Aboriginal...
Since its formation in 1990, CAEPR has produced a series of research papers tracking progress in the...
This document brings together four papers on Indigenous community governance which were written as v...
Schwab and Sutherland (forthcoming) present a spatial analysis of the distribution of Indigenous edu...
Invalid ISBN 1 877005 as published on the itemThe search for affordable housing was a significant tr...
In August 2001 three CAEPR researchers, each based in a different community, observed the conduct of...
Within the framework of the Council for Australian Governments (COAG) requirements for benchmarking ...
This paper examines trends across a number of socioeconomic outcomes for Indigenous Australians from...
Australia’s Northern Territory has three categories of local government referred to as municipal, co...
There is a compelling need for fresh perspective on the policy implications of Indigenous demographi...
This paper attempts to identify the key challenges facing Indigenous people and governments in resha...
One of the most important programs for Indigenous community and economic development is the Communit...
The West Kimberley is the latest region in Western Australia poised to reap huge benefits from a sup...
The announcement by the Australian and Western Australian governments of funding for Stage 2 of the ...
This document brings together four papers on Indigenous community governance which were written as v...
The successes and failures of interventions to close the disadvantage gap for remote Aboriginal...
Since its formation in 1990, CAEPR has produced a series of research papers tracking progress in the...
This document brings together four papers on Indigenous community governance which were written as v...
Schwab and Sutherland (forthcoming) present a spatial analysis of the distribution of Indigenous edu...
Invalid ISBN 1 877005 as published on the itemThe search for affordable housing was a significant tr...
In August 2001 three CAEPR researchers, each based in a different community, observed the conduct of...
Within the framework of the Council for Australian Governments (COAG) requirements for benchmarking ...
This paper examines trends across a number of socioeconomic outcomes for Indigenous Australians from...