City Road Podcast Stories about cities and urban life
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- Society & Culture
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Informed stories about cities and urban life. Listen live on the Community Radio Network. Podcast on iTunes.
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112. The State of Australasian Cities Conference
This final episode of the Infrastructure Governance Incubator series focuses on a plenary discussion centred around the findings of the ‘Infrastructure Governance Incubator’ - a multidisciplinary collaborative research project across three universities – which took place at the State of Australasian Cities conference in December 2023.
This discussion sought to contribute to a renewed research agenda for Australasian infrastructure governance, considering the current state of governance challenges and potential future directions. It draws on findings from the Incubator’s case study of the Western Sydney Parkland City in New South Wales, Australia, across multiple critical issues discussed across this podcast series: planning on unceded First Nations land, accountability and social legitimacy, collaborative governance and integration, and power and politics.
Panel members:
A/Prof. Tooran Alizadeh, Dr. Rebecca Clements, A/Prof. Glen Searle, A/prof Dallas Rogers, Elle Davidson (University of Sydney), Crystal Legacy (University of Melbourne), Liton Kamruzzaman (Monash University).
Discussant: Jago Dodson (RMIT)
This podcast series is sponsored by the Infrastructure Governance Incubator, a three-year (2020-2023) collaborative research platform—funded by the Henry Halloran Research Trust—across three universities (The University of Sydney, The University of Melbourne and Monash University) and in partnership with Planning Institute of Australia (PIA) NSW & Victoria.
Audio recording and editing by Mikayla McGuirk-Scolaro. -
111. The Politics of Infrastructure Governance
Infrastructure planning is intrinsically political – but are there significant differences between how we expect infrastructure planning to occur and the reality of how it plays out? Are our current approaches to the relationship between planning and power working?
In this fifth episode, we build on learnings from Victoria and consider the politics behind infrastructure decisions with Dr James Murphy, drawing on the latest book, ‘The Making and Unmaking of East-West Link’. We consider the roles of electoral strategy, the making of political rationale, and community resistance to ask how we might better unpack the way we think about infrastructure politics.
Informed by: Murphy, J. C. (2022). The making and unmaking of East-West Link. Melbourne Univ. Publishing.
Host: Dallas Rogers (University of Sydney)
Guest: James Murphy, Crystal Legacy (University of Melbourne)
This podcast series is sponsored by the Infrastructure Governance Incubator, a three-year (2020-2023) collaborative research platform—funded by the Henry Halloran Research Trust—across three universities (The University of Sydney, The University of Melbourne, and Monash University), and in partnership with Planning Institute of Australia (PIA) NSW & Victoria.
Audio recording and editing by Mikayla McGuirk-Scolaro and Dallas Rogers. -
110. From Social Housing to the Missing Middle
The evidence shows that increasing new housing production alone won’t solve the affordability crisis. At this special event, the NSW Minister for Housing and Homelessness, the Hon. Rose Jackson MLC and a panel of experts from industry, academia, and community sectors, will outline strategies for unlocking affordable supply, from social housing to the ‘missing middle’.
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
The Hon. Rose Jackson MLC, Minister for Housing, Homelessness, Mental Health, Youth, the North Coast, and Water
PANEL
Katie Stevenson, Executive Director Property Council of Australia NSW
Mark Degotardi, Chief Executive Officer, Community Housing Industry Association NSW
Dr Catherine Gilbert, the University of Sydney
Emma Greenhalgh, CEO National Shelter
CHAIRED BY
Professor Nicole Gurran, Director, Henry Halloran Research Trust -
109. Contested Climate
Water security is one of the most contested issues facing urban and regional communities across Australia. For growing inland cities like Canberra, conventional assumptions and approaches to water supply, catchment management, and urban planning must be reimagined in the context of climate change. This special event hosted in partnership with the Planning Institute of Australia examines the increasingly complex debates surrounding water security and asks whether and how inland cities can ever achieve true urban resilience.
This event is co-hosted with the Planning Institute of Australia.
SPEAKERS
Professor Barbara Norman, Foundation Chair of Urban and Regional Planning and Director of Canberra Urban and Regional Futures (CURF), the University of Canberra
Danielle Francis, Manager Policy and Strategy, Water Services Australia
Dr Jason Alexandra, Research Fellow, Transformational Climate Adaptation and Water, ANU Institute for Climate, Energy & Disaster Solutions, ANU Institute for Water Futures.
Dr Danswell Starrs, Water Science, Monitoring and Modelling Manager at ACT Government
CHAIRED BY
Dr Maxine Cooper FPIA, FEIANZ, Adjunct Prof UC, Chair ACT & Region Catchment Management Coordination Group, Chair Landcare ACT, and Deputy Chair National Landcare Network. -
108. Saving Sydney
We know we must end sprawl and densify our cities, but are tall towers the answer? Can the skyscraper solve our affordable housing problem? Does high density necessarily mean high-rise, and do such developments stack up environmentally – or do they exacerbate issues such as urban heat? What are the wider benefits or disbenefits of hyper-density in terms of urban design, street making, community cohesion or accessibility? Join Saving Sydney author Dr Elizabeth Farrelly and a panel of experts for a robust discussion on whether Sydney should ‘go up or go out’, and whether this is even the right question.
PANEL
Dr Fiona Foo, Cardiologist
Professor Cathy Sherry, Law School and Smart Green Cities, Macquarie University
Tim Sneesby, Manager Strategic Planning, Waverley Council
Professor Michael Chapman, Chair of Architecture and Design, University of Western Sydney
CHAIRED BY
Dr Elizabeth Farrelly, author, journalist and Henry Halloran Research Trust Writer in Residence -
107. Contested Country
How are Australia’s Indigenous and settler histories recognised and confronted in cultural heritage conservation and urban planning practice, alongside wider struggles for native title, land rights, and spatial justice? Join this conversation with a panel of experts across Indigenous history, archaeology, heritage conservation, urban planning and design.
SPEAKERS
Professor Bronwyn Carlson, Head of Department of Indigenous Studies, Macquarie University
Stephen Gapps, Senior Associate Historian, Artefact Heritage Services
Seth Dias, PHD Candidate at the USYD school of Architecture, Design and Planning
Innez Haua
Jess Herder, Senior Associate, Thirriwirri
CHAIRED BY
Professor Michael Mossman, Associate Dean Indigenous Strategy and Services, the University of Sydney