@article{andersen_they_2018, title = {‘{They} took the land, now we’re fighting for a house’: {Aboriginal} perspectives about urban housing disadvantage}, volume = {33}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {‘{They} took the land, now we’re fighting for a house’}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2017.1374357}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2017.1374357}, abstract = {Aboriginal Australians experience substantial housing disadvantage on a range of measures, yet relatively little is known about how urban Aboriginal people perceive their housing circumstances. While most Aboriginal people live in urban or suburban areas, research and policy attention has tended to focus on remote housing issues. This paper draws on focus groups conducted with Aboriginal people at an Aboriginal Medical Service in Western Sydney (n = 38) about their housing experiences and beliefs about why many Aboriginal people experience the housing disadvantage they described. Participants described a landscape in which their housing experiences were materially affected by their Aboriginality and inextricably linked to racial discrimination, poverty, marginalization, the lack of social and affordable housing and disempowerment, all with negative implications for their psychosocial well-being. Participant views aligned with critical race theory, with race described as a fundamental structural force that created and deepened housing disadvantage beyond economic hardship alone.}, number = {4}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Andersen, Melanie J. and Williamson, Anna B. and Fernando, Peter and Eades, Sandra and Redman, Sally}, month = may, year = {2018}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2017.1374357}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {635--660}, } @article{athira_traditional_2023, title = {Traditional {Building} {Knowledge} {Systems} - {A} {Path} to {Sustainability}}, volume = {1210}, issn = {17551307}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/traditional-building-knowledge-systems-path/docview/2840650878/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.1088/1755-1315/1210/1/012026}, abstract = {In architecture and planning domain, sustainability has been considered as a core strategy for over three decades now. The modern era of globalisation, led to homogenisation in architecture, thus widening the gap between modern and Traditional Building Knowledge systems (TBKS) worldwide. This gap is widening at an alarming speed and alienating the architectural concepts from the context and its people, by ignoring the sustainability aspects. The TBKS has evolved in line with the environmental, cultural, technological, economic, and historical context within which it exists. The current study provides an overview of the concepts involved in sustainability and TBKS and how TBKS is addressed in the international forums and UN reports, and ancient treatises that formed the basis of TBKS in the Indian context. The four pillars of sustainability i.e., environmental, social, economic, and cultural dimensions were considered as the parameters to measure how far the sustainability has been achieved in the built environment. From the extensive review of literature, a set of design indicators was identified for the TBKS. Further, its applicability was also analysed based on the case examples. The current study reveals that such indicators, mentioned in the TBKS, are context-specific in nature. Hence, it helps in achieving sustainability at the building level. The paper concludes by identifying the co-relation between TBKS and sustainability and calls for more studies upon using the Traditional Building Knowledge Systems as a potential tool to achieve sustainability.}, language = {English}, number = {1}, journal = {IOP Conference Series. Earth and Environmental Science}, author = {Athira, S B and Amritha, P K and Chithra, K}, month = jul, year = {2023}, note = {Place: Bristol Publisher: IOP Publishing}, keywords = {Architecture, Built environment, Context, Context-specific design, Cultural factors, Environmental Studies, Globalization, Indicators, Literature reviews, Sustainability, Sustainable built environment, Traditional Building Knowledge system (TBKS), Urban environments, Widening}, pages = {012026}, } @misc{australian_institute_of_architects_re-valuing_2021, title = {Re-valuing {Heritage}}, url = {https://issuu.com/architecture-chapter/docs/architectvictoria_summer_2020}, abstract = {Architect Victoria. The Official Journal of the Australian Institute of Architects Victorian Chapter. Summer 2020.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-11-22}, publisher = {Australian Institute of Architects}, author = {{Australian Institute of Architects}}, month = nov, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{beer_housing_2007, title = {Housing {Affordability} and {Planning} in {Australia}: {The} {Challenge} of {Policy} {Under} {Neo}-liberalism}, volume = {22}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {Housing {Affordability} and {Planning} in {Australia}}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673030601024572}, doi = {10.1080/02673030601024572}, abstract = {Housing affordability has once again appeared on the policy agenda of Australian governments. House prices have risen in response to booming demand and constraints on the supply of dwellings, especially a shortage of land in the capital cities and skill shortages within the housing industry. Many young and low-income households have experienced great difficulty in gaining access to homeownership and in being able to afford private rental housing. This paper briefly considers the characteristics of public debate around housing affordability in Australia. It examines the role of neo-liberalism in shaping policy responses to housing affordability problems and assesses the argument that affordability goals can be achieved through manipulation of the planning system. It contends that neo-liberal philosophies of government direct policy action to the planning system, but such strategies have a limited capacity to improve housing affordability. Australian governments need to adopt more effective housing policies if they are to meet the needs of the 700 000 to 1 million households who live in unaffordable housing.}, number = {1}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Beer, Andrew and Kearins, Bridget and Pieters, Hans}, month = jan, year = {2007}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673030601024572}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {11--24}, } @inproceedings{bhaumik_smart_2022, title = {Smart {Vernacular} {Architecture}: {A} {Framework} for {Assessment} and {Virtual} {Reality}-based {Visualisation} of {Indigenous} {Toda} {Dwellings}}, volume = {218}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85163630192&doi=10.1016%2fj.procs.2023.01.047&partnerID=40&md5=f98c4ee887b2afea1b9e955b6df58eb2}, doi = {10.1016/j.procs.2023.01.047}, abstract = {Indigenous communities and their way of life are facing significant challenges due to globalisation, industrialisation and urbanisation, which have forced them to gradually adopt the architecture, lifestyle, and culture of mainstream society. This paper proposes a Smart Vernacular Architecture (SVA) framework and applies it to the indigenous dwellings of the Todas, a tribal community living in India's Nilgiri mountains. The architecture and indoor space quality of these dwellings are investigated in this paper based on specific thermal comfort parameters like the interior temperature and airflow. The indoor temperatures of Toda dwellings are simulated for the predicted climate of 2100 to evaluate their climate resilience. Finally, the paper illustrates the usage of virtual reality (VR) to explore and visualise the Toda settlement and the interior environment parameters of a Toda dwelling to effectively convey and preserve the knowledge of vernacular architecture. In a nutshell, this paper elucidates the advantages of vernacular architecture and construction methods to arouse the interest of academics, policymakers, students, and professionals in preserving architecture, culture, and indigenous knowledge. © 2022 Elsevier B.V.. All rights reserved.}, author = {Bhaumik, R. and Prajapati, S. and Kumar, T. and Bhalla, K. and Ashok, S.S.}, year = {2022}, keywords = {Architecture, Climate Resilience}, pages = {651--670}, } @article{braganca_possible_2023, title = {Possible {Gardens}: cosmopolitical worlds}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/possible-gardens-cosmopolitical-worlds/docview/2839587425/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.3389/fenvs.2023.1234178}, abstract = {This article presents some of the reflections produced by the Possible Gardens research, which explores the world of gardens where living beings interact directly, creating multispecific worlds. It is directed towards everyday gardens, which are still very present in Brazilian cities. It uses comparative case studies of multiple exemplar cases throughout the Arrudas River territory in the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil. The aim is to present the contributions of the Possible Gardens, this expanded category of garden understood as cosmopolitical worlds, to the thinking of contemporary cities based on ecological practices derived from urban daily life. In addition, it opens an understanding of the gardens potential as a culturally relevant element, as an example and catalyst for environmental policies.}, language = {English}, journal = {Frontiers in Environmental Science}, author = {Bragança, Luciana Souza}, month = jul, year = {2023}, note = {Place: Lausanne Publisher: Frontiers Research Foundation}, keywords = {Case studies, Catalysts, Cities, Comparative studies, Cosmology, Cosmopolitic, Environmental Studies, Environmental policy, Environmental science, Ethnography, Gardens, Gardens \& gardening, Homeless people, Multispecies, Neighborhoods, Possible, Urbanism, architecture, ecological practices}, } @article{broffman_building_2015, title = {The building story: {Architecture} and inclusive design in remote {Aboriginal} {Australian} communities}, volume = {18}, shorttitle = {The building story}, url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.2752/175630615X14135446523341}, doi = {10.2752/175630615X14135446523341}, number = {1}, journal = {The Design Journal}, author = {Broffman, Andrew}, year = {2015}, note = {Publisher: Taylor \& Francis}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {107--134}, } @article{broffman_indigenizing_2021, title = {Indigenizing practice: {Patronage} and peril}, volume = {110}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.670451590439004}, abstract = {In the second of a series of discussions on Indigenizing architectural practice in Australia, Sarah Lynn Rees invited Andrew Broffman to respond to our theme of unbuilt work by exploring projects that are never constructed not because they are speculative or utopian, but because their Indigenous association is met with complex barriers that are often impossible to overcome.}, language = {English}, number = {1}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Broffman, Andrew}, month = jan, year = {2021}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture, Australia}, pages = {18--20}, } @phdthesis{burgess_aboriginal_2018, type = {{PhD} {Thesis}}, title = {Aboriginal {Stories} of {Victoria} {Park} {Negotiation}, consultation and engagement}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/2123/17969}, school = {University of Sydney}, author = {Burgess, Anne Maree Player}, year = {2018}, note = {ZSCC: 0000000}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, } @article{burgess_gregory_1997, title = {Gregory {Burgess}: {Brambuk} {Living} {Cultural} {Centre}}, volume = {320}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b1315459~S30}, journal = {A + U: Architecture and Urbanism}, author = {Burgess, Gregory}, month = may, year = {1997}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, pages = {112--117}, } @book{cartmel_blak_2018, title = {Blak {Design} {Matters}: {A} {National} {Survey} of {Contemporary} {Indigenous} {Design} {Curated} by {Jefa} {Greenaway}}, isbn = {978-0-9945708-5-7}, shorttitle = {Blak {Design} {Matters}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6651901~S2}, abstract = {A catalogue published for the exhibition 'Blak Design Matters' held at the Koorie Heritage Trust, 21 July - 30 September 2018. Contents: Blak Design Matters by Aunty Joy Murphy Wandin, Foreword by Tom Mosby, Curatorial Essay by Jefa Greenaway, The City We Un-Built with Blak Design by Timmah Ball, All Design Matters by Sarah Lynn Rees, The Public and Private: Maree Clarke's Thung-Ung Coorang by Myles Russell-Cook, Decolonise, Indigenise and recognise: Creating the International Indigenous Design Charter by Dr Russell Kennedy and Dr Meghan Kelly, Designer statements and biographies: Balarinji, Gilimbaa, Marcus Lee Designs, Francois Lane, Nicole Monks, Arkie Barton (Arkie the Label), TJ Cowlishaw (Aarli), Lyn-Al Young, Carroll Go-Sam, Jefa Greenaway, Dillon Kombumerri, Paul Herzich, Maree Clarke, Kristy Dickinson (Haus of Dizzy), Grace Lillian Lee, Anindilyakwa Arts, Babbarra Women's Centre, Injalak Arts, Merrepen Arts, MiArt Designs.}, language = {en}, publisher = {Koorie Heritage Trust}, author = {Cartmel, Hannah}, month = jul, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, } @article{chowdhooree_indigenous_2022, title = {Indigenous knowledge of mud architecture: experiences of surviving against multiple natural hazards}, volume = {13}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85109377253&doi=10.1108%2fIJDRBE-12-2020-0128&partnerID=40&md5=ea2c622e5562c5b65a30fe5c49a796f4}, doi = {10.1108/IJDRBE-12-2020-0128}, abstract = {Purpose: Mud architecture as one of the expressions of vernacular architecture illustrates the success of indigenous knowledge of traditional communities. Due to the pressure of industrialization, urbanization and globalization, the trend of using non-traditional measures guided by the Western-Euro-centric knowledge and technologies considers the traditional practices as expressions of backward past, under-development and poverty. Though mud as a building material is usually assumed as a fragile and ephemeral material that cannot survive against natural hazards, the surviving traditional mud buildings are needed to be investigated to know their performances during and after different types of natural hazard incidents. Design/methodology/approach: This paper intends to study the available cases of mud architecture of Chattogram, Bangladesh to trace the history of their survival despite of experiencing multiple natural hazards and to understand their status and prospect of resisting hazards. Three individual homesteads are chosen as cases for conducting physical survey as well as engaging inhabitants and local masons of the locality in semi-structured interviews in a story telling mode to know the construction process and histories of experiencing natural hazards. Available literatures are reviewed, and experts are interviewed to understand the causes of their performances and possible ways to improve the quality. Findings: Collected information on mud architecture demonstrates their quality of surviving against many natural challenges and this hazard-resilient quality can be enhanced through using contemporary building technologies and materials, promising to co-exist with the global trend. Originality/value: This study as an attempt to reinvent the vernacular architectural heritage endorses the need of appreciating indigenous knowledge for enhancing community resilience against natural hazards. © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited.}, number = {4}, journal = {International Journal of Disaster Resilience in the Built Environment}, author = {Chowdhooree, I. and Das, K.K.}, year = {2022}, keywords = {Architecture, Bangladesh, Building And Construction, Buildings, Community, Construction, Developing countries--LDCs, Disasters, Earthquakes, Globalization, Hazards, Indigenous knowledge, Industrial development, Knowledge, Local materials, Mud, Mud architecture, Natural hazards, Poverty, Resilience, Seismic engineering, Skills, Survival, Urbanization, Vernacular architecture}, pages = {451--469}, } @article{clark_brambuk_1991, title = {Brambuk {Koori} {Living} {Cultural} {Centre} – {Budja} {Budja}, {Hall}’s {Gap}, {Victoria} – {Taking} a {Journey} {Through} {Time}}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, journal = {Agora}, author = {Clark, Ian}, year = {1991}, note = {Number: 4 ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {10--12}, } @article{crabtree_community_2014, title = {Community {Land} {Trusts} and {Indigenous} {Housing} in {Australia}—{Exploring} {Difference}-{Based} {Policy} and {Appropriate} {Housing}}, volume = {29}, issn = {0267-3037}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2014.898248}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2014.898248}, abstract = {Previous work has highlighted the primacy of non-economic rights in Indigenous housing objectives. This paper builds on that work and Sanders' other work demonstrating the limited relevance of ‘mainstream’ home ownership for many Indigenous communities, exploring whether models based on community land trust (CLT) principles might be appropriate for articulating Indigenous housing aspirations. The paper describes current Indigenous housing scenarios in urban, regional and remote New South Wales and Queensland, and findings regarding the resonance of CLTs with Indigenous housing objectives. While dominant policy and public discourses promote Indigenous home ownership as an economic development strategy, or as requiring the alienation of Indigenous lands, the research found neither to be primary sector imperatives. The paper draws on difference-based arguments regarding Indigenous affairs arguing that a focus on diversity emerging from informed Indigenous choice finds a role for policy supporting diverse Indigenous housing aspirations.}, number = {6}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Crabtree, Louise}, month = aug, year = {2014}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2014.898248}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {743--759}, } @article{crane_exhibition_2022, title = {Exhibition: {Rekkan} / {Tamuwu} / {Nyinakat} - sit/sit down}, issn = {1442-0953}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.320816831560005}, abstract = {South Australia’s Jam Factory has curated an exhibition of collaborations between Indigenous textile artists and South Australian furniture designers.}, language = {English}, number = {78}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Artichoke}, author = {Crane, Nathan James}, month = mar, year = {2022}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {46--47}, } @techreport{cripps_improving_2019, address = {Melbourne}, title = {Improving housing and service responses to domestic and family violence for {Indigenous} individuals and families}, url = {https://ssrn.com/abstract=3545703}, number = {AHURI Final Report No. 320}, institution = {Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited}, author = {Cripps, Kyllie and Habibis, Daphne}, year = {2019}, note = {Number: 320}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, } @book{cumpston_plants_2022, address = {Port Melbourne, Victoria}, title = {Plants: {Past}, {Present} and {Future}}, isbn = {978-1-76076-188-2}, shorttitle = {Plants}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8922446~S30}, publisher = {Thames \& Hudson Australia Pty Ltd}, author = {Cumpston, Zena and Fletcher, Michael-Shawn and Head, Lesley and Neale, Margo}, collaborator = {ProQuest (Firm)}, year = {2022}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban planning}, } @article{davidson_brambuk_1991, title = {Brambuk, {Capital} of {Gariwerd} in {Victoria}’s {Grampian} {Ranges}}, volume = {10}, number = {12}, journal = {Australian Society}, author = {Davidson, Jim}, month = dec, year = {1991}, note = {Number: 12 ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {32--35}, } @article{dovey_architecture_1996, title = {Architecture about aborigines}, volume = {85}, issn = {00038725}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=9610221668&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, abstract = {Aboriginal architecture - long considered a contradiction in terms - has become a significant arena for a profession which still has no Aborigines registered. Dovey considers cultural anomalies.}, language = {English}, number = {4}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Dovey, Kim}, month = jul, year = {1996}, note = {Number: 4}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{dovey_continuing_1996, title = {Continuing cultural tensions are evident in stage one of the {Galina} {Beek} {Living} {Cultural} {Centre} at {Healesville}, {Victoria} by {Anthony} {Styant}-{Browne}}, volume = {85}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=9703103281&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, number = {5}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Dovey, Kim}, year = {1996}, note = {Number: 5 ZSCC: 0000002}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {72--75}, } @book{drew_touch_1999, address = {Sydney}, title = {Touch this earth lightly: {Glenn} {Murcutt} in his own words}, isbn = {978-1-875989-46-1}, shorttitle = {Touch this earth lightly}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2536858~S30}, publisher = {Duffy \& Snellgrove}, editor = {Drew, Philip and Murcutt, Glenn}, year = {1999}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @phdthesis{dunn_brambuk_1990, address = {Melbourne, Australia}, type = {Undergraduate}, title = {Brambuk {Living} {Cultural} {Centre} and the {Remchingen} {Kulturhalle},}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2446054~S30}, school = {University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture}, author = {Dunn, Michelle}, year = {1990}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{easthope_thinking_2020, title = {Thinking relationally about housing and home}, volume = {35}, issn = {0267-3037}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1801957}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2020.1801957}, number = {9}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Easthope, Hazel and Power, Emma and Rogers, Dallas and Dufty-Jones, Rae}, month = oct, year = {2020}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1801957}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {1493--1500}, } @article{ely_designing_2020, title = {Designing {Futures} for an {Age} of {Differentialism}}, volume = {12}, issn = {1754-7075}, number = {3}, journal = {Design and Culture}, author = {Ely, Philip}, year = {2020}, note = {Number: 3 Publisher: Taylor \& Francis}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {265--288}, } @misc{ewbaustralia_shiptons_2012, title = {Shiptons {Flat} {Project}- {EWB}}, url = {https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1KPtca2AYA}, abstract = {Shiptons Flat Amenities Project. Cape York Australia. A collaboration of CAT, EWB, Aurecon, Arup, SKM and ICV. for more details see www.ewb.org.au}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, author = {{EWBAustralia}}, month = jul, year = {2012}, note = {Directors: \_:n3650 ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{fantin_aboriginal_2003, title = {Aboriginal {Identities} in {Architecture}}, volume = {92}, issn = {00038725}, url = {https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A111849755/AONE?u=unimelb&sid=bookmark-AONE&xid=a937a896}, abstract = {Discusses the complexities of tackling Australian Aboriginal identities, ancestors and places through architecture. Significance of the architectural interpretation of Aboriginal identity; Architects and firms that incorporate aboriginal symbolism in their projects; Issues raised in design projects with Aboriginal groups.}, number = {5}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Fantin, Shaneen}, month = oct, year = {2003}, note = {Number: 5 Publisher: Architecture Media Pty Ltd}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {84--87}, } @incollection{farley_house_2018, title = {The {House} {Game}: {A} visual method for eliciting {Aboriginal} housing parameters}, shorttitle = {The {House} {Game}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b9020540~S30}, booktitle = {Visual {Spatial} {Enquiry}}, publisher = {Routledge}, author = {Farley, Holly and Birdsall-Jones, Chris and Datta, Sambit}, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {98--116}, } @incollection{findley_building_2005, title = {Building {Visibility}: {Uluru} {Kata}-{Tjuta} {Cultural} {Centre}}, isbn = {0-203-60149-1}, url = {https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/unimelb/detail.action?docID=200426}, booktitle = {Building {Change}: {Architecture}, {Politics} and {Cultural} {Agency}}, publisher = {Routledge}, author = {Findley, Lisa}, year = {2005}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {93--135}, } @article{fortin_unceded_2020, title = {Unceded: {Land} and design sovereignty}, volume = {109}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.987515915093009}, abstract = {Canada’s pavilion at the 2018 Venice Architecture Biennale brought together multiple contemporary Indigenous architects, who collaborated to emphasize the collective values of Indigenous peoples, demonstrate the artificial nature of colonial borders and remind visitors of the importance of Indigenous voices in shaping a future that respects and celebrates the land.}, language = {English}, number = {2}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Fortin, David}, month = mar, year = {2020}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture, Canada}, pages = {60--62}, } @book{fromonot_glenn_2003, address = {London}, title = {Glenn {Murcutt}: buildings + projects 1962-2003}, isbn = {978-0-500-34193-3}, shorttitle = {Glenn {Murcutt}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2849191~S30}, publisher = {Thames \& Hudson}, author = {Fromonot, Françoise and Murcutt, Glenn}, year = {2003}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{gajendran_integrating_2022, title = {Integrating {Indigenous}, {Western} and inclusive pedagogies for work-integrated learning partnerships in architecture and design disciplines}, volume = {23}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85148088962&partnerID=40&md5=671efc9114175eac3fb0d9d18ec8e6ec}, abstract = {Work-integrated learning (WIL) provides an opportunity for integrating Indigenous and Western learning pedagogies and facilitate a meaningful pathway for authentic learning through developing partnerships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous stakeholders. However, research in developing WIL with Indigenous communities and appropriate learning pedagogies is limited. This paper discusses how WIL can inculcate Indigenous and non-Indigenous learning pedagogies to facilitate authentic, culturally enhanced learning. The proposed theoretical framework was constructed using the concepts relating to ‘8 Ways of Knowing Indigenous Learning’ framework, Studio Based Learning, Co-design, and WIL. The research method draws on autoethnographic approaches to reflect and critically analyze academic observations and reflections across two case studies. The findings propose a WIL pedagogical approach integrating Indigenous and non-Indigenous learning pedagogies to enable authentic learning by co-generating emergent knowledge in complex socio-cultural contexts. Moreover, this approach enables training architecture students to represent cultures and values of the Indigenous communities in the mainstream Anglo Australian architecture. © 2022 Authors. All rights reserved.}, number = {2}, journal = {International Journal of Work-Integrated Learning}, author = {Gajendran, T. and Tucker, C. and Ware, S. and Tose, H.S.}, year = {2022}, keywords = {Indigenous knowledge, Urban design, architecture}, pages = {259--277}, } @incollection{gardiner_indigenous_2018, title = {Indigenous placemaking in urban {Melbourne}: {A} dialogue between a {Wurundjeri} {Elder} and a non-{Indigenous} architect and academic}, shorttitle = {Indigenous placemaking in urban {Melbourne}}, booktitle = {The handbook of contemporary {Indigenous} architecture}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Gardiner, Aunty Margaret and McGaw, Janet}, year = {2018}, note = {ZSCC: 0000003}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, pages = {581--605}, } @article{ghida_organic_2024, title = {Organic stabilization in earthen plaster: {Eco}-compatible architecture and ancient techniques in {Tata} {Somba} homes}, volume = {13}, issn = {20952635}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/organic-stabilization-earthen-plaster-eco/docview/3072014851/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.1016/j.foar.2024.02.004}, abstract = {The study of organic stabilization is crucial for understanding its impact on the durability and effectiveness of earthen plaster. Analyzing natural admixtures' effects on plaster properties provides insights that aid in optimizing plaster composition and application for desired characteristics. The addition of biopolymers, known to enhance plaster performance, necessitates further investigation to understand their role in earthen plaster stabilization. This study focuses on Tata Somba homes in Benin and Togo, recognized as UNESCO World Heritage sites. These unique architectural examples embody "architecture without architects", relying solely on local traditional knowledge. The objective is to explore and revive Tata Somba's ancient eco-technology for earth plaster stabilization. Research shows that biopolymers' combined stabilization and application techniques can improve earthen plaster performance. Seven promising bio-stabilizers were identified, suggesting their potential as sustainable, effective options for CO2 mitigation in buildings. These findings not only deepen our understanding of earthen architecture but also underscore the potential of merging traditional, eco-friendly building methods with modern scientific insights to create sustainable solutions for cultural heritage preservation and contemporary built environments.}, language = {English}, number = {3}, journal = {Frontiers of Architectural Research}, author = {Ghida, Ben D}, month = jun, year = {2024}, note = {Place: Nanjing Publisher: KeAi Publishing Communications Ltd}, keywords = {Aesthetics, Architecture, Benin, Biopolymers, Built environment, Cement, Cultural heritage, Cultural resources, Environmental stewardship, Historic sites, Plasters, Stabilization, Togo}, pages = {625--638}, } @article{go_dossier_2021, title = {Dossier - rights and reclamations}, volume = {109}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/informit.987460016179234}, doi = {10.3316/informit.987460016179234}, number = {2}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Go, -Sam Carroll}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 2 ZSCC: 0000000 Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {53}, } @article{go_yugambeh-bundjalung_2021, title = {Do {Yugambeh}-{Bundjalung} cultural landscapes matter?}, volume = {107}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/IELAPA.313921057793616}, doi = {10.3316/ielapa.313921057793616}, abstract = {In the excitement around the Gold Coast hosting the 2018 Commonwealth Games, and the growth in infrastructure overseen by the Gold Coast Cultural Precinct Masterplan, an opportunity has been missed to engage with significant Indigenous placemaking. Carroll Go-Sam takes a long-term perspective.}, number = {1}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Go, -Sam Carroll}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 1 ZSCC: 0000001 Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {51--53}, } @article{go_sam_future_2021, title = {Future indigeneity}, volume = {109}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/ielapa.987478649150492}, doi = {10.3316/ielapa.987478649150492}, abstract = {When I graduated in the late 1990s as the first Indigenous woman from Queensland to complete an architecture degree, the pace of Indigenous recognition in Australia seemed slow in comparison to international shifts. Renzo Piano Building Workshop had recently completed the Jean-Marie Tjibaou Cultural Center in New Caledonia (1998) and, at the time, Indigeneity in architecture was only contemplated as a fringe experience, riding a new wave of commodifying difference in cultural tourism. After Tjibaou, the shift from fringe to hyperscaled centre began, moving us towards an inclusive future in which Indigenous rights in land and design were made possible. In Australia, Brambuk - the National Park and Cultural Centre in Victoria's Grampians National Park - was struggling to meet the needs of state visitors on shoestring funding, but there were few opportunities to experience Indigenous cultures through the medium of architecture in urban centres. Indigenous culture and its more exotic features were easily marketable at remote sites such as Kuniya and Liru/Uluru-Kata Tjuta, but the vexed history of colonization was hotly avoided.}, number = {2}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Go Sam, Carroll}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 2 ZSCC: 0000000 Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {54--55}, } @book{gombay_indigenous_2018, address = {London}, title = {Indigenous {Places} and {Colonial} {Spaces}: {The} {Politics} of {Intertwined} {Relations}}, isbn = {978-1-315-47253-9}, url = {https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781315472539/indigenous-places-colonial-spaces-nicole-gombay-marcela-palomino-schalscha}, abstract = {In the aftermath of colonial occupation, Indigenous peoples have long fought to assert their sovereignty. This requires that settler colonial societies comprehend the inadequacy of their responses to Indigenous peoples’ contestations of existing power relations. Taking an international and contemporary perspective, this book critically explores the extent to which Indigenous peoples are transforming the conditions of their coexistence with settler colonial societies. With contributions from Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers across the humanities and social sciences, the book is divided into four sections that reflect some key arenas of debate: ontological negotiations; assertions of connections to and rights over land; the contradictions embedded in practices of "recognition"; and the possibilities for change based on rightful relationships. From medicine to urban spaces, from love to alternative economies, from acts of citizenship to environmental justice, the chapters of this book provide a grounded analysis of how these spaces of intertwined coexistence are being crafted, resisted, reconfigured, and expanded. Providing concrete insight into the responses of Indigenous communities to the impacts of settler colonialism, this book will appeal to researchers in Cultural Geography, Anthropology, Rural Studies, Political Geography, Indigenous Studies, and Settler Colonial Studies.}, publisher = {Routledge}, editor = {Gombay, Nicole and Palomino-Schalscha, Marcela}, month = sep, year = {2018}, doi = {10.4324/9781315472539}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage, Urban planning}, } @incollection{go-sam_mobilising_2018, address = {Singapore}, title = {Mobilising {Indigenous} {Agency} {Through} {Cultural} {Sustainability} in {Architecture}: {Are} {We} {There} {Yet}?}, isbn = {978-981-10-6904-8}, shorttitle = {Mobilising {Indigenous} {Agency} {Through} {Cultural} {Sustainability} in {Architecture}}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_14}, abstract = {This chapter proposes that architectural projects, for, with and by Indigenous people, could have more leverage if the goals of cultural sustainability were adopted, thereby mobilising greater participation and agency more effectively. The sustainability agenda advances resource accountability to moderate economic growth providing socio-economic benefits for future generations. This concern was first raised about the overdeveloped Western world; however, drawing on the writings of Indigenous and other scholars, we found that socio-economic sustainability concepts derived from Western paradigms are not easily adapted to all circumstances and development practices, because Indigenous Australians have not benefited to anything like the same degree as their non-Indigenous counterparts, somewhat undermining cultural sustainability.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, booktitle = {The {Handbook} of {Contemporary} {Indigenous} {Architecture}}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll and Keys, Cathy}, editor = {Grant, Elizabeth and Greenop, Kelly and Refiti, Albert L. and Glenn, Daniel J.}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_14}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0] }, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {347--380}, } @inproceedings{go-sam_fabricating_2011, address = {Brisbane, QLD}, title = {Fabricating {Blackness}: {Aboriginal} identity constructs in the production and authorisation of architecture}, url = {https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:245276}, abstract = {The architect and writer, Fantin concluded that, ‘Aboriginal identity is not separate from external forces and influences and architecture is one of those influences. The difficulty in evaluating Fantin’s assertion of the power exerted by architecture is firstly due to a lack of any convincing documented measurement of supposed forces, and secondly there is a relative absence of Indigenous voices in the discourse; so it becomes problematic to conclude the extent architecture exerts this presumed power. Another view presented, is that architecture incorporating Aboriginal themes derived from cultural and totemic references, reinforces identity stereotypes. Leading to the conclusion that several of the completed works consciously and deliberately represent Aboriginality as a primitive and romanticised concept. This latter view poses a contradictory perception that contemporary Indigenous client groups or individuals who participate in projects are passively or naïvely complicit in endorsing regressive, essentialised notions of identity.}, language = {en}, booktitle = {Audience: {The} 28th {Society} of {Architectural} {Historians}, {Australia} and {New} {Zealand} ({SAHANZ}) {Annual} {Conference}}, publisher = {SAHANZ}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll}, year = {2011}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, pages = {1--27}, } @misc{go-sam_indigenous_2008, title = {Indigenous {Design} {Paradigms}}, url = {https://architectureau.com/articles/indigenous-design-paradigms/}, urldate = {2021-06-25}, journal = {Architecture AU}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll}, year = {2008}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{go-sam_remote_2021, title = {Remote indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a map}, volume = {105}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/abs/10.3316/INFORMIT.284859308820958}, doi = {10.3316/informit.284859308820958}, abstract = {Indigenous people and their settlements are more than tiny dots littered across a vast continent. These smaller settlements are under threat of closure by top-down policies in favour of urban concentration.}, number = {5}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Go-Sam, Carroll and Memmott, Paul}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 5 ZSCC: 0000001 Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {53--54}, } @incollection{grant_reimagining_2021, title = {Reimagining {Spaces} for {Indigenous} {Justice}: {The} {Architecture} and {Design} of the {Kununurra} {Courthouse}}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85141607702&doi=10.4324%2f9780429059858-3&partnerID=40&md5=e1dcae5cc568d72a3119695118d0f0c0}, booktitle = {Courthouse {Architecture}, {Design} and {Social} {Justice}}, author = {Grant, E. and Hook, M.}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.4324/9780429059858-3}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {11--30}, } @book{grant_handbook_2018, title = {The {Handbook} of {Contemporary} {Indigenous} {Architecture}}, isbn = {978-981-10-6904-8}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8442843~S2}, abstract = {​This Handbook provides the first comprehensive international overview of significant contemporary Indigenous architecture, practice, and discourse, showcasing established and emerging Indigenous authors and practitioners from Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand, the Pacific Islands, Canada, USA and other countries. It captures the breadth and depth of contemporary work in the field, establishes the historical and present context of the work, and highlights important future directions for research and practice. The topics covered include Indigenous placemaking, identity, cultural regeneration and Indigenous knowledges. The book brings together eminent and emerging scholars and practitioners to discuss and compare major projects and design approaches, to reflect on the main issues and debates, while enhancing theoretical understandings of contemporary Indigenous architecture.The book is an indispensable resource for scholars, students, policy makers, and other professionals seeking to understand the ways in which Indigenous people have a built tradition or aspire to translate their cultures into the built environment. It is also an essential reference for academics and practitioners working in the field of the built environment, who need up-to-date knowledge of current practices and discourse on Indigenous peoples and their architecture.}, language = {en}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Grant, Elizabeth and Greenop, Kelly and Refiti, Albert L. and Glenn, Daniel J.}, month = jun, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{grealy_governing_2023, title = {Governing disassembly in {Indigenous} housing}, volume = {38}, issn = {0267-3037}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2021.1882662}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2021.1882662}, abstract = {Without proper attention, houses disassemble. In public housing, property management regimes are charged with performing the repairs and maintenance necessary to combat this entropic tendency. This article argues that such governance regimes can accelerate housing’s disassembly, through rules that restrict housing interventions, bureaucratic technologies that misrecognize housing failure, and processes that defer and delay necessary fixwork. It analyzes Indigenous housing in the Northern Territory of Australia, in terms of three specific legal-bureaucratic instruments and the temporalizations they constitute: the lease and promise; the tender and repetition; the condition report and waiting. The article considers the effects of these pairings in Alice Springs town camps and the challenge of thinking beyond bureaucratic housing regimes.}, number = {2}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Grealy, Liam}, month = feb, year = {2023}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2021.1882662}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {327--346}, } @article{grealy_sustaining_2022, title = {Sustaining housing through planned maintenance in remote {Central} {Australia}}, volume = {0}, issn = {0267-3037}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045}, abstract = {Once housing is constructed, its sustainability depends on the efficacy of property maintenance. In remote Indigenous communities in Australia, responsive or reactive approaches to property maintenance dominate over planned and preventive attention, leaving housing in various states of disrepair. By documenting an approach that is succeeding in this wider context, this article shows the commonplace situation of poorly maintained social housing is entirely interruptible. It does so by examining an alternative and exceptional approach taken on the remote Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands in South Australia, where housing benefits from a planned maintenance program combined with an environmental health program. Through detailed empirical analysis of program datasets, interviews, and ethnographic fieldwork, this article describes the expert, systematic, and attentive work required to sustain functional housing in the wider context of undersupply, crowding, and challenging environmental conditions. We argue for the necessity of planned maintenance approaches as an essential component of sustainable housing, both to extend the life of housing assets and to ensure householder health and wellbeing.}, number = {0}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Grealy, Liam and Lea, Tess and Moskos, Megan and Benedict, Richard and Habibis, Daphne and King, Stephanie}, month = jun, year = {2022}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous housing policy, Maintenance, Property, environmental health, healthy housing, housing quality, sustainability}, pages = {1--23}, } @incollection{greenaway_embracing_2018, address = {Singapore}, title = {Embracing cultural sensitivities that celebrate {First} {Nations} perspectives}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7171429~S2}, abstract = {Our Voices: Indigeneity and Architecture is an exciting advance in the field of architecture offering multiple indigenous perspectives on architecture and design theory and practice.}, language = {en-GB}, booktitle = {Our voices: indigeneity and architecture}, publisher = {ORO Editions}, author = {Greenaway, Jefa}, editor = {Kiddle, R and Stewart, L P and O'Brien, K}, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture, Canada, Indigenous, Indigenous peoples, Maori, North America}, pages = {154--163}, } @misc{greenaway_water_2019, title = {The water story: a conversation between {Jefa} {Greenaway} and {Sam} {Comte}}, url = {https://art-museum.unimelb.edu.au/resources/articles/the-water-story-a-conversation-between-jefa-greenaway-and-samantha-comte/#:~:text=It%20is%20a%20story%20that%20connects%20over%20time%20and%20place,bigger%20story%20that%20speaks%20internationally.}, journal = {Ancestral memory exhibition catalogue}, author = {Greenaway, J and Comte, S}, year = {2019}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous knowledge, Urban design}, } @incollection{greenaway_designing_2014, address = {Oxfordshire}, title = {Designing {Australia} - critical engagement with {Indigenous} placemaking}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6360407~S2}, booktitle = {Design for a complex world: challenges in practice and education}, publisher = {Libri}, author = {Greenaway, Jefa and McGaw, J and Wallis, J}, year = {2014}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban design}, pages = {29--54}, } @article{greenaway_venice_2020, title = {Venice {Biennale} 2020 {Australian} {Pavilion} preview: {In} between}, volume = {109}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/ielapa.976466563136896}, abstract = {Tristan Wong (SJB) and Jefa Greenaway (Greenaway Architects) have been selected by the Australian Institute of Architects as the creative directors for Australia’s pavilion at the 2020 Venice Architecture Biennale. Compelled by the theme set by Biennale curator, Hashim Sarkis, of “How will we live together?”, Wong and Greenaway will collaborate with Australia’s Pacific neighbours in a response that represents non-Indigenous and Indigenous ideologies simultaneously. “Architecture Australia” caught up with the creative directors soon after their selection.}, language = {English}, number = {1}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Greenaway, Jefa and Wong, Tristan and Richardson, Anthony}, month = jan, year = {2020}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC, Australia Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {112--113}, } @misc{haar_things_2021, title = {Things {To} {Share}}, url = {https://www.haarchitecture.com.au/things-to-share}, abstract = {In his practice, education, advocacy and mentorship, architect Paul Haar has always been informed by deep green thinking and environmental science. He prefers to operate inside small local economic and social systems.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, journal = {Paul Haar Architect}, author = {Haar, Paul}, month = oct, year = {2021}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{habibis_housing_2019, title = {Housing policy in remote {Indigenous} communities: how politics obstructs good policy}, volume = {34}, issn = {0267-3037}, url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02673037.2018.1487039}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2018.1487039}, number = {2}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Habibis, Daphne and Phillips, Rhonda and Phibbs, Peter}, year = {2019}, note = {Number: 2 Publisher: Taylor \& Francis}, keywords = {Architecture, Property, Urban planning}, pages = {252--271}, } @article{habibis_australian_2013, title = {Australian {Housing} {Policy}, {Misrecognition} and {Indigenous} {Population} {Mobility}}, volume = {28}, issn = {0267-3037}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2013.759545}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2013.759545}, abstract = {Policy initiatives in remote Indigenous Australia aim to improve Indigenous health and well-being, and reduce homelessness. But they have raised controversy because they impinge on Indigenous aspirations to remain on homeland communities, require mainstreaming of Indigenous housing and transfer Indigenous land to the state. This paper uses recognition theory to argue that if policies of normalization are imposed on remote living Indigenous people in ways that take insufficient account of their cultural realities they may be experienced as a form of misrecognition and have detrimental policy effects. The paper examines the responses of remote living Indigenous people to the National Partnerships at the time of their introduction in 2009–2010. Drawing on interview and administrative data from a national study on Indigenous population mobility, the paper argues although the policies have been welcomed, they have also been a source of anxiety and anger. These feelings are associated with a sense of violated justice arising from experiences of misrecognition. The paper argues this can lead tenants to depart their homes as a culturally sanctioned form of resistance to state control. This population mobility is associated with homelessness because it takes place in the context of housing exclusion. Policy implications include developing new models of intercultural professional practice and employing a capacity-building approach to local Indigenous organisations.}, number = {5}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Habibis, Daphne}, month = jul, year = {2013}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2013.759545}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {764--781}, } @book{hamdi_placemakers_2010, address = {London}, title = {The {Placemaker}'s {Guide} to {Building} {Community}}, isbn = {978-1-84977-517-5}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5930652~S30}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis Group}, author = {Hamdi, Nabeel}, year = {2010}, note = {ZSCC: 0000197}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{hastings_why_2023, title = {Why do some disadvantaged {Australian} families become homeless? {Resources}, disadvantage, housing and welfare}, volume = {0}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {Why do some disadvantaged {Australian} families become homeless?}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2023.2194248}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2023.2194248}, abstract = {Homeless families include children whose experiences of homelessness and extreme poverty can have long-term negative impacts over the life course. This paper proposes a resource-orientated causal explanation of the mechanisms of family homelessness in Australia. Given the critical role of poverty in housing insecurity, the model explains why some families living in extreme poverty and disadvantage become homeless and others do not. The research is positioned within a critical realist approach to theoretical causal explanation. It is influenced by interdisciplinary literature and psychologist Hobfoll’s Conservation of Resources theory. Previously published empirical analysis informs and supports the development of this theoretical model. Families use their resources to mitigate challenges to their housing security. However, disadvantage limits their accumulation of resources, contributes to accelerating resource loss, and constrains their capacity to act. An acute lack of affordable housing and insufficient welfare payments to secure private rental accommodation severely impacts a family’s capacity to navigate crises and avoid homelessness.}, number = {0}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Hastings, Catherine}, month = apr, year = {2023}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2023.2194248}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {1--25}, } @book{hercus_land_2009, title = {The {Land} is a {Map}: {Placenames} of {Indigenous} {Origin} in {Australia}}, isbn = {978-1-921536-56-4}, shorttitle = {The {Land} is a {Map}}, url = {https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt24hfdz}, abstract = {The entire Australian continent was once covered with networks of Indigenous placenames. These names often evoke important information about features of the environment and their place in Indigenous systems of knowledge. On the other hand, placenames assigned by European settlers and officials are largely arbitrary, except for occasional descriptive labels such as 'river, lake, mountain'. They typically commemorate people, or unrelated places in the Northern hemisphere. In areas where Indigenous societies remain relatively intact, thousands of Indigenous placenames are used, but have no official recognition. Little is known about principles of forming and bestowing Indigenous placenames. Still less is known about any variation in principles of placename bestowal found in different Indigenous groups. While many Indigenous placenames have been taken into the official placename system, they are often given to different features from those to which they originally applied. In the process, they have been cut off from any understanding of their original meanings. Attempts are now being made to ensure that additions of Indigenous placenames to the system of official placenames more accurately reflect the traditions they come from. The eighteen chapters in this book range across all of these issues. The contributors (linguistics, historians and anthropologists) bring a wide range of different experiences, both academic and practical, to their contributions. The book promises to be a standard reference work on Indigenous placenames in Australia for many years to come.}, urldate = {2022-12-12}, publisher = {ANU Press}, author = {Hercus, Luise and Hodges, Flavia and Simpson, Jane}, year = {2009}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage, Urban planning}, } @article{hobbs_indigenous_2020, title = {Indigenous {Australian} heritage on private land: an examination of guidance provided by local government authorities of {NSW}}, volume = {56}, issn = {0729-3682}, url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07293682.2020.1854797}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1080/07293682.2020.1854797}, number = {4}, journal = {Australian Planner}, author = {Hobbs, Daniel T and Spennemann, Dirk HR}, year = {2020}, note = {Number: 4 Publisher: Taylor \& Francis}, keywords = {Architecture, Heritage, Indigenous Australian heritage, Urban planning, heritage planning, local government policy, public information}, pages = {249--260}, } @article{hook_kununurra_2013, title = {Kununurra transitional housing duplex house (kununurra transitional housing stage 3)}, url = {https://researchrepository.rmit.edu.au/esploro/outputs/designAndArchitecture/Kununurra-transitional-housing-duplex-house-kununurra/9921859980501341}, journal = {Architecture of Necessity Award, Sweden}, author = {Hook, Martyn and Iredale, Adrian and Pedersen, Finn}, year = {2013}, note = {Publisher: Virserum Art Museum, Sweden}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{hu_integrated_2023, title = {An {Integrated} {Framework} for {Preservation} of {Hawaii} {Indigenous} {Culture}: {Learning} from {Vernacular} {Knowledge}}, volume = {13}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/integrated-framework-preservation-hawaii/docview/2819418062/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.3390/buildings13051190}, abstract = {Vernacular architecture represents the traditional architecture that developed over time within a particular culture or region that embodied indigenous knowledge. These buildings provide an invaluable cultural heritage, and learning from them is an important way to preserve indigenous culture. However, the negative view commonly held about indigenous knowledge in architectural theory and historical research that developed during the colonial era has not begun to change; the indigenous knowledge embedded in vernacular architecture has been ignored. This article discusses a proposed framework in which we can learn from vernacular architecture to preserve indigenous culture, including studying traditional building techniques, incorporating traditional materials and designs, adapting traditional designs to contemporary needs, involving local communities, and encouraging sustainable building practices. This proposed framework is applied to learning from Native Hawaiian architecture as a way to demonstrate its practicality and necessity. By studying the designs, materials, and techniques used in vernacular buildings, we can gain a deeper understanding of the cultural, environmental, and social contexts in which they were created.}, language = {English}, number = {5}, journal = {Buildings}, author = {Hu, Ming and Suh, Junghwa and {Camryn Pedro}}, year = {2023}, note = {Place: Basel Publisher: MDPI AG}, keywords = {Affordable housing, Architecture, Armed forces, Asian Americans, Biodiversity, Building And Construction, Buildings, Cardiovascular disease, Climate change, Community involvement, Cultural factors, Cultural heritage, Cultural identity, Cultural resources, Culture, Food, Green buildings, Hawaii, Historic buildings \& sites, Historic preservation, Indigenous knowledge, Industrial development, Knowledge, Learning, Local communities, Multiculturalism \& pluralism, Natural resources, Pacific Islander people, Soil erosion, Sustainable development, Sustainable practices, Tourism, United States--US, Vernacular architecture, indigenous knowledge, native Hawaii, vernacular architecture}, pages = {1190}, } @article{iredale_kununurra_2016, title = {Kununurra transitional housing}, volume = {105}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=113467964&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, number = {1}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Iredale, Adrian}, year = {2016}, note = {Publisher: Architecture Media South Melbourne, VIC}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {69--73}, } @article{james_housing_2022, title = {Housing inequality: a systematic scoping review}, volume = {0}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {Housing inequality}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2119211}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2022.2119211}, abstract = {Housing inequality is far more than a housing matter. To discover how housing inequality has been used across disciplines, and how this may inform future housing research, we performed a systematic scoping review. We found that housing inequality provides multiple understandings as well as a variety of uses, for example, as a measurement tool, a conceptual device, or as subject matter. To draw together useful lessons from this conceptually diverse body of work, we identify four principle uses of ‘housing inequality’ in the literature – an outcome, an experience, a product, and a construct. These four framings offer a level of conceptual clarity for thinking about, and researching, the different expressions of housing inequality. It contributes to housing research by providing an approach for taking into account the multiple and complex roles of housing, and its distribution and impacts across society.}, number = {0}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {James, Laura and Daniel, Lyrian and Bentley, Rebecca and Baker, Emma}, month = sep, year = {2022}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2119211}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {1--22}, } @incollection{jenkins_concepts_2009, address = {London, UNITED KINGDOM}, title = {Concepts of social participation in architecture}, isbn = {978-0-203-86949-9}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8564112~S30}, booktitle = {Architecture, {Participation} and {Society}}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis Group}, author = {Jenkins, Paul}, editor = {Jenkins, Paul and Forsyth, Leslie}, year = {2009}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {9--22}, } @book{jenkins_architecture_2009, address = {London, UNITED KINGDOM}, title = {Architecture, {Participation} and {Society}}, isbn = {978-0-203-86949-9}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b3516787~S30}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis Group}, author = {Jenkins, Paul and Forsyth, Leslie}, year = {2009}, note = {ZSCC: 0000139}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @incollection{johnson_reclaiming_2018, title = {Reclaiming a place: {Post}-colonial appropriations of the colonial at {Budj} {Bim}, {Western} {Victoria}, {Australia}}, isbn = {1-315-47253-8}, url = {https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781315472539-5/reclaiming-place-louise-johnson?context=ubx&refId=e8fa0c10-0929-4eed-abc5-c467dd42bbd7}, booktitle = {Indigenous {Places} and {Colonial} {Spaces}}, publisher = {Routledge}, author = {Johnson, Louise C}, editor = {Gombay, Nicole and Palomino-Schalscha, Marcela}, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture}, pages = {91--107}, } @phdthesis{johnson_making_2019, type = {{PhD} {Thesis}}, title = {Making {Civic} {Space}: {A} {Comparative} {Study} of {Civic} {Space} {Design} in the {Contemporary} {Settler} {Societies} of {Australia} and {New} {Zealand}}, shorttitle = {Making {Civic} {Space}}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/11343/238551}, school = {University of Melbourne}, author = {Johnson, Fiona Claire}, year = {2019}, note = {ZSCC: 0000000}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @book{johnson_ecology_2001, address = {Washington DC}, title = {Ecology and design : frameworks for learning.}, isbn = {1-55963-813-3}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2711982~S2}, publisher = {Island Press}, author = {Johnson, Hill, Kristina, J. Bart}, year = {2001}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban planning}, } @book{jones_indigenous_nodate, address = {Sydney}, title = {Indigenous {Knowledge} in {The} {Built} {Environment}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6646295~S2}, language = {en}, publisher = {Australian Government, Department of Education and Training,}, author = {Jones, David S and Choy, Darryl Low and Tucker, Richard and Heyes, Scott and Revell, Grant and Bird, Susan}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous knowledge}, } @book{jones_learning_2021, title = {Learning {Country} in {Landscape} {Architecture}: {Indigenous} {Knowledge} {Systems}, {Respect} and {Appreciation}}, shorttitle = {Learning {Country} in {Landscape} {Architecture}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8489992~S30}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, author = {Jones, David S.}, year = {2021}, note = {ZSCC: 0000001}, keywords = {Aboriginal, Architecture, Australia, Indigenous Knowledge Systems, Landscape architecture, Urban Geography and Urbanism, Urban planning}, } @inproceedings{kammeyer_designing_0000, title = {Designing landscapes (a walk through the architectural design process)}, url = {https://ucanr.edu/repository/fileaccess.cfm?article=161588&p=HWQAIM}, publisher = {University of California}, author = {Kammeyer, Kenneth K}, year = {0000}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban design}, pages = {79--85}, } @book{kelly_indigenous_2023, series = {Lecture {Notes} in {Civil} {Engineering}}, title = {Indigenous {Housing} {Practices} as {Inspirations} for {Modern} {Green} {Buildings}}, volume = {240}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85131133187&doi=10.1007%2f978-981-19-0507-0_14&partnerID=40&md5=af016459ceccef701fd3a36570ec04f6}, abstract = {Some of Canada’s Indigenous architecture and building technology is reviewed in conjunction with Indigenous environmental philosophy as a guide for green building design and sustainably sourced building materials. Most Indigenous knowledge has been camouflaged by decades of European oppression and Indigenous loss. While there is little data on historical Indigenous architecture, what data that is available offers insight towards the complex relationships that structures have with the ecosystem. The Indigenous groups targeted here are the Inuit of Sub-Arctic Canada and the Haida of Haida Gwaii, an island on the Western Coast of British Columbia. Every detail in Indigenous architecture is the result of generations of complex and in-depth knowledge of local climate and vegetation, guided by a spiritual link and respect to their environment. Considering such knowledge can aid in the adjustment towards green buildings and communities, as illustrated by Inuit igloo and Haida cedar plank houses. Microclimate assessment becomes increasingly important as buildings grow larger and more complex. Considering different components of buildings and analyzing the impacts of local temperature changes, winds, precipitation, and vegetation, can result in buildings that are more efficient in both energy and materials. Together with the use of local materials inspired by the cedar plank houses and the efficient form of the igloo creating a warm home in frigid weather, wisdom of the people from hundreds of years ago can be appreciated. © 2023, Canadian Society for Civil Engineering.}, author = {Kelly, Z. and Iqbal, A.}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1007/978-981-19-0507-0_14}, note = {Pages: 158}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, } @misc{kennedy_international_2019, title = {International {Indigenous} {Design} {Charter}}, url = {https://www.ico-d.org/resources/indigo}, urldate = {2021-01-01}, journal = {Ico-d.org}, author = {Kennedy, Russell and Kelly, Meghan and Greenaway, Jefa and Martin, Brian}, year = {2019}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, } @book{kiddle_our_2018, title = {Our {Voices}: {Indigeneity} and {Architecture}}, isbn = {978-1-940743-49-3}, shorttitle = {Our {Voices}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7171429~S2}, abstract = {Our Voices: Indigeneity and Architecture is an exciting advance in the field of architecture offering multiple indigenous perspectives on architecture and design theory and practice. Indigenous authors from Aotearoa NZ, Canada, Australia, and the USA explore the making and keeping of places and spaces which are informed by indigenous values and identities. The lack of publications to date offering an indigenous lens on the field of architecture belies the rich expertise found in indigenous communities in all four countries. This expertise is made richer by the fact that this indigenous expertise combines both architecture and design professional practice, that for the most part is informed by Western thought and practice, with a frame of reference that roots this architecture in the indigenous places in which it sits.}, language = {en}, publisher = {ORO Editions}, author = {Kiddle, Rebecca and Stewart, Luugigyoo Patrick and O'Brien, Kevin}, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @book{kirke_shelter_2009, address = {Shelley, W.A}, title = {The shelter of law: designing with communities for a culture of natural justice}, isbn = {978-0-9775243-4-1}, shorttitle = {The shelter of law}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b3266364~S30}, abstract = {Philip Kirke's presentation to senior World Bank staff in May 2009 drew on experience gained over many years working with remote Aboriginal communities in WA. His work as a design architect is recognised for the depth and degree to which it seeks to understand, engage with and incorporate indigenous cultural principles}, publisher = {Friend Books}, author = {Kirke, Philip James}, year = {2009}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction}, } @book{krinsky_contemporary_1996, address = {New York}, title = {Contemporary {Native} {American} architecture: cultural regeneration and creativity}, isbn = {978-0-19-509739-9 978-0-19-509740-5}, shorttitle = {Contemporary {Native} {American} architecture}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, author = {Krinsky, Carol Herselle}, year = {1996}, keywords = {Architecture, Canada, Indigenous, North America}, } @article{le_gal_built_2020, title = {Built {Environments} and {Cardiometabolic} {Morbidity} and {Mortality} in {Remote} {Indigenous} {Communities} in the {Northern} {Territory}, {Australia}}, volume = {17}, url = {https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/3/769}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17030769}, number = {3}, journal = {International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health}, author = {Le Gal, Camille and Dale, Michael J and Cargo, Margaret and Daniel, Mark}, year = {2020}, note = {Number: 3 Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {769}, } @phdthesis{lochert_architecture_1994, type = {{PhD} {Thesis}}, title = {Architecture and the {Construction} of {Aboriginality}}, school = {Thesis, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology}, author = {Lochert, Mathilde}, year = {1994}, note = {ZSCC: 0000002}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{lochert_mediating_2021, title = {Mediating {Aboriginal} architecture [{Collaborations} between {Aboriginal} clients and non {Aboriginal} architects.]}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b1113478~S3}, doi = {10.3316/ielapa.970909634}, number = {54-55}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Transition (Collingwood, Vic)}, author = {Lochert, Mathilde}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 54-55 ZSCC: 0000028 Publisher: Copyright Agency}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {8--19}, } @book{malnar_new_2013, address = {Minneapolis}, title = {New architecture on indigenous lands}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5619060~S2}, urldate = {2021-06-29}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, author = {Malnar, Joy Monice and Vodvarka, Frank}, year = {2013}, keywords = {Architecture, Canada, Indigenous, North America}, } @book{malnar_new_2013, address = {Minneapolis}, title = {New architecture on indigenous lands / {Joy} {Monice} {Malnar} and {Frank} {Vodvarka}.}, isbn = {978-0-8166-7744-3}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5619060~S30https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5619060~S30}, abstract = {Machine generated contents note: -- Contents -- List of Projects -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Making Sense of Architecture -- 1. Design Alternatives -- 2. A Northwest "Cook's Tour" -- 3. Architectural Expressions of Culture -- 4. New Places of Learning -- 5. Iconic Design Parameters -- 6. Central Plains Images -- 7. Southwest Identity and Traditions -- 8. The Pueblos of the Rio Grande Region -- 9. Cultural and Sustainable Housing -- 10. Forming Indigenous Typologies -- Notes -- Index., " Black Elk speaks of the "square boxes" his people were forced into, and Winona LaDuke of the "boxes of mints" on Native lands. As long as the government was deciding what tribal buildings should look like, Native custom and culture were bound to be boxed in--or boxed out. But in the post-1996 era of more flexible housing policies, Native peoples have assumed a key role in the design of buildings on tribal lands. The result is an architecture that finally accords with the traditions and ideas of the people who inhabit it. A virtual tour of recent Native building projects in Canada and the western and midwestern United States, New Architecture on Indigenous Lands conducts readers through cultural centers and schools, clinics and housing, and even a sugar camp, all while showing how tribal identity is manifested in various distinctive ways. Focusing on such sites as the Tribal Council Chambers of the Pojoaque Pueblo; the Zuni Eagle Sanctuary in New Mexico; the Nk'Mip Desert Cultural Center in Osoyoos, British Columbia; and the T'lisalagi'law Elementary School, Joy Monice Malnar and Frank Vodvarka offer wide-ranging insights into the sensory, symbolic, cultural, and environmental contexts of this new architecture. With close attention to details of design, questions of tradition, and cultural issues, and through interviews with designers and their Native clients, the authors provide an in-depth introduction to the new Native architecture in its many guises--and a rare chance to appreciate its aesthetic power. "--}, language = {eng}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, author = {Malnar, Joy Monice}, collaborator = {Vodvarka, Frank}, year = {2013}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{malone_ways_2007, title = {Ways of {Belonging}: {Reconciliation} and {Adelaide}'s {Public} {Space} {Indigenous} {Cultural} {Markers}}, volume = {45}, issn = {1745-5871}, shorttitle = {Ways of {Belonging}}, url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2007.00445.x}, doi = {10.1111/j.1745-5871.2007.00445.x}, abstract = {As an arguably ‘post colonial’ society, Australia is evolving its particular identity and sense of self, but reconciliation with its Indigenous peoples remains a significant political and cultural issue. Social inclusion or marginalisation is reflected in the construct of the civic landscape and this paper traces and contextualises public space Indigenous representation or ‘cultural markers’, since the 1960s in Adelaide, South Australia, the Kaurna people's land. This paper identifies social phases and time periods in the evolution of the ways in which Indigenous people and their culture have been included in the city's public space. Inclusion of Indigenous peoples in civic landscapes contributes not only to their spiritual and cultural renewal and contemporary identity, but also to the whole community's sense of self and to the process of reconciliation. This has the potential to provide a gateway to a different way of understanding place which includes an Indigenous perspective and could, symbolically, contribute to the decolonisation of Indigenous people. An inter-related issue for the colonising culture is reconciliation with the Indigenous nature of the land, in the sense of an intimate sense of belonging and connectedness of spirit through an understanding of Indigenous cultural landscapes, an issue which this paper explores. The paper also sets out suggestions for the facilitation of further Indigenous inclusion and of re-imagining ways of representation.}, language = {en}, number = {2}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Geographical Research}, author = {Malone, Gavin}, year = {2007}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {158--166}, } @article{marques_sense_2020, title = {Sense of {Place} and {Belonging} in {Developing} {Culturally} {Appropriate} {Therapeutic} {Environments}: {A} {Review}}, volume = {10}, shorttitle = {Sense of {Place} and {Belonging} in {Developing} {Culturally} {Appropriate} {Therapeutic} {Environments}}, url = {https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/10/4/83}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.3390/soc10040083}, number = {4}, journal = {Societies}, author = {Marques, Bruno and Freeman, Claire and Carter, Lynette and Pedersen Zari, Maibritt}, year = {2020}, note = {Number: 4 ZSCC: 0000002 Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Maori}, pages = {83}, } @incollection{martin_guiding_2020, address = {Singapore}, title = {Guiding decolonial trajectories in design: an {Indigenous} position}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7556403~S2}, booktitle = {Our voices {II}: the de-colonial project}, publisher = {ORO Editions}, author = {Martin, B and Greenaway, J}, editor = {Kiddle, R and Stewart, L P and O'Brien, K}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous knowledge}, pages = {238--245}, } @article{mashford-pringle_mamwi_2023, title = {Mamwi {Gidaanjitoomin}/{Together} {We} {Build} {It}: {A} {Systematic} {Review} of {Traditional} {Indigenous} {Building} {Structures} in {North} {America} and {Their} {Potential} {Application} in {Contemporary} {Designs} to {Promote} {Environment} and {Well}-{Being}}, volume = {20}, issn = {1661-7827}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/mamwi-gidaanjitoomin-together-we-build-systematic/docview/2791652802/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.3390/ijerph20064761}, abstract = {(1) Background: Housing has long been recognized as an essential determinant of health. Our sense of home goes beyond physical shelter and is associated with personal or collective connections with spaces and places. However, modern architecture has gradually lost its connections between people and places; (2) Methods: We examined traditional Indigenous architecture and how it can be utilized in contemporary settings to restore connections to promote the environment, health, and well-being. (3) Results: We found that traditional Indigenous building structures may be the best manifestation of the Indigenous interconnected and holistic worldviews in North America, containing thousands of years of knowledge and wisdom about the land and the connection between humans and the environment, which is the foundation of reciprocal well-being; (4) Conclusions: Learning from the traditional structures, we proposed that modern architects should consider the past, present, and future in every endeavor and design and to utilize traditional knowledge as a crucial source of inspiration in creating works that are beneficial for both current and future generations by taking collectivism, health and well-being, and the environment into consideration in designs.}, language = {English}, number = {6}, journal = {International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health}, author = {Mashford-Pringle, Angela and Fu, Ruofan and Stutz, Sterling}, year = {2023}, note = {Place: Basel Publisher: MDPI AG}, keywords = {Architecture, Capitalism, Collectivism, Design, Environmental health, First Nations, Housing, Indigenous, Native peoples, North America, Sciences: Comprehensive Works, Systematic review, Well-being, environmental or climate health, health promotion, housing, wellbeing}, pages = {4761}, } @book{mayne_alternative_2014, address = {Kent Town, South Australia}, title = {Alternative interventions: {Aboriginal} homelands, outback {Australia} and the {Centre} for {Appropriate} {Technology}}, isbn = {978-1-74305-272-3}, shorttitle = {Alternative interventions}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5395849~S30}, abstract = {Not all interventions in Aboriginal Australia are inspired by external agents, politics or ideology. Some arise from simple, pragmatic responses to community needs where people and their aspirations are central. Historian Alan Mayne unravels a story of people, place and relationships. At once both personal and intensely political, this is a journey of ideas into action; intervention through innovation}, publisher = {Wakefield Press}, author = {Mayne, Alan}, year = {2014}, note = {ZSCC: 0000005}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous peoples}, } @book{mcgaw_assembling_2015, address = {Abingdon, Oxon ; New York}, series = {Routledge research in architecture}, title = {Assembling the centre: architecture for indigenous cultures: {Australia} and beyond}, isbn = {978-0-415-81532-1}, shorttitle = {Assembling the centre}, url = {https://cat.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5757792~S30}, publisher = {Routledge}, author = {McGaw, Janet and Pieris, Anoma}, year = {2015}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0] OCLC: 881205498}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{mcgaw_holding_2022, title = {A ‘{Holding} {Place}’: {An} {Indigenous} {Typology} to {Mediate} {Hospital} {Care}}, volume = {76}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125932313&doi=10.1080%2f10464883.2022.2017694&partnerID=40&md5=77e1651735d34d5f8d9c5d4f1ad0d914}, doi = {10.1080/10464883.2022.2017694}, number = {1}, journal = {Journal of Architectural Education}, author = {McGaw, J. and Vance, A. and Patten, U.H.}, year = {2022}, keywords = {Architecture, architecture}, pages = {75--84}, } @article{mcgaw_roaming_2024, title = {Roaming: {Therapeutic} and {Design} {Practices} for {Indigenous} {Healing}}, volume = {78}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85188627221&doi=10.1080%2f10464883.2024.2303919&partnerID=40&md5=e42c4f59613024f91764e2bef7b76c87}, doi = {10.1080/10464883.2024.2303919}, number = {1}, journal = {Journal of Architectural Education}, author = {McGaw, J. and Vance, A. and Patten, U.H. and Kim, S.}, year = {2024}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous}, pages = {26--41}, } @book{mcgaw_re-making_2014, address = {[Parkville], Victoria}, title = {Re-making {Indigenous} place in {Melbourne}: towards a {Victorian} {Indigenous} cultural knowledge \& education centre}, isbn = {978-0-7340-5032-8}, shorttitle = {Re-making {Indigenous} place in {Melbourne}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5761879~S2}, publisher = {Melbourne School of Design, The University of Melbourne}, author = {McGaw, Janet and Walliss, Jillian and Greenaway, Jefa}, collaborator = {{University of Melbourne}}, year = {2014}, note = {OCLC: 900033142}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban and cultural heritage, Urban design}, } @article{mcgaw_indigenous_2011, title = {Indigenous {Place}-{Making} in the {City}: {Dispossessions}, {Occupations} and {Implications} for {Cultural} {Architecture}}, volume = {16}, issn = {1326-4826, 1755-0475}, shorttitle = {Indigenous {Place}-{Making} in the {City}}, url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13264826.2011.621544}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1080/13264826.2011.621544}, language = {en}, number = {3}, urldate = {2021-06-24}, journal = {Architectural Theory Review}, author = {McGaw, Janet and Pieris, Anoma and Potter, Emily}, month = dec, year = {2011}, note = {Number: 3}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design, Urban planning}, pages = {296--311}, } @misc{melbourne_time_2020, title = {The time is now for {Indigenous} design equity}, url = {https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/the-time-is-now-for-indigenous-design-equity}, abstract = {Indigenous Australians have long been architects, engineers and land managers; a University of Melbourne expert says that wisdom must help tackle climate change}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-07-01}, journal = {Pursuit}, author = {Melbourne, University of, Jefa Greenaway}, month = sep, year = {2020}, note = {Section: Design}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, } @article{memmott_aboriginal_1988, title = {Aboriginal housing: the state of the art (or the non/state of the art)}, volume = {77}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b1116361~S30}, number = {4}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Memmott, Paul}, year = {1988}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {34--47}, } @inproceedings{memmott_design_2000, title = {Design concepts and processes for public {Aboriginal} architecture}, volume = {PaPER55-56}, url = {https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:9239}, abstract = {The authors wrote this paper in an attempt to document and describe how to address the design challenge of a public building which captures and distils Indigenous cultural assumptions, perspectives, connections, and cultural content. Although there is a body of knowledge about Aboriginal vernacular design and meaning, and about related architectural design issues, there is not a good sense of how relevant this collective wisdom is in the context of a public or monumental building. There are also many pitfalls in prescribing something in a domain which is largely uncharted - or indeed of prescribing anything to architects, or on behalf of Aboriginal communities. Questions that are addressed in this paper include:- What might an interested architect want to know about Aboriginal cultures? What are some possible thematic elements and complexes that might lend themselves to architectural form, function and meaning? What are some good and bad examples of previous attempts to design and incorporate Indigenous culture into public buildings? What Aboriginal design issues are most relevant to the design of public architecture?}, language = {eng}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, publisher = {PAPER}, author = {Memmott, P. C. and Reser, J.}, month = jan, year = {2000}, note = {ZSCC: 0000034 ISSN: 1031-7465 Issue: Special Australian Aboriginal Double Issue no. 55-56}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {69--86}, } @book{memmott_take_2003, title = {Take 2: housing design in {Indigenous} {Australia}}, shorttitle = {Take 2}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2854211~S30}, publisher = {Royal Australian Institute of Architects}, author = {Memmott, Paul and Go Sam, Carroll}, editor = {Chambers, Catherine}, year = {2003}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @book{memmott_design_2023, series = {Design and the {Vernacular}: {Interpretations} for {Contemporary} {Architectural} {Practice} and {Theory}}, title = {Design and the {Vernacular}: {Interpretations} for {Contemporary} {Architectural} {Practice} and {Theory}}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85189777268&partnerID=40&md5=29c95a5d45b4c9785ab84a6418a22ded}, author = {Memmott, P. and Ting, J. and O’Rourke, T. and Vellinga, M.}, year = {2023}, note = {Pages: 308}, keywords = {architecture}, } @inproceedings{memmott_shifting_2016, title = {Shifting {Australian} {Indigenous} settlements}, volume = {28}, url = {https://www.jstor.org/stable/44211390}, abstract = {The University of Queensland's institutional repository, UQ eSpace, aims to create global visibility and accessibility of UQ’s scholarly research.}, language = {eng}, booktitle = {Traditional {Dwellings} and {Settlements} {Review}}, publisher = {International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments}, author = {Memmott, Paul}, month = jan, year = {2016}, note = {ZSCC: 0000000 ISSN: 1050-2092 Issue: 1}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {39--39}, } @article{memmott_housing_2024, title = {Housing {Design} for {Health} in a {Changing} {Climate} for {Remote} {Indigenous} {Communities} in {Semi}-{Arid} {Australia}}, volume = {4}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85205234211&doi=10.3390%2farchitecture4030041&partnerID=40&md5=81843dc9e6772caf2917c83bbbdb7b38}, doi = {10.3390/architecture4030041}, number = {3}, journal = {Architecture}, author = {Memmott, P. and Lansbury, N. and Nash, D. and Snow, S. and Redmond, A.M. and Burgen, C. and Matthew, P. and Quilty, S. and Frank, P.N.}, year = {2024}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {778--801}, } @book{memmott_gunyah_2007, title = {Gunyah, {Goondie} + {Wurley}: {The} {Aboriginal} {Architecture} of {Australia}}, isbn = {978-0-7022-3245-9}, shorttitle = {Gunyah, {Goondie} + {Wurley}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b3140413~S2}, abstract = {Debunking the inaccurate popular notions of early Aboriginal architecture and settlement, this lavish volume explores the range and complexity of Aboriginal-designed structures, spaces, and territories, from minimalist shelters to permanent houses and villages. As a framework for ongoing debate and research on Aboriginal lifestyles and cultural heritage, the book additionally features a brief overview of post-1970 collaborative architecture between white Australian architects and Aboriginal clients, as well as an introduction to the work of the first Aboriginal graduates of university-based courses in architecture.}, language = {en}, publisher = {Univ. of Queensland Press}, author = {Memmott, Paul}, year = {2007}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous knowledge}, } @incollection{memmott_re-invention_2018, address = {Singapore}, title = {The {Re}-invention of the ‘{Behaviour} {Setting}’ in the {New} {Indigenous} {Architecture}}, isbn = {978-981-10-6904-8}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_31}, abstract = {In understanding the new authentic indigenous architecture, this chapter analyses cultural appropriateness using a concept originally derived from ecological psychology in the USA. The ‘behaviour setting’ concept analyses how certain attributes such as spatial behaviour, physical boundaries, ecological structures, environmental meanings, management controls and time properties combine to form categories of complex architectural places to fulfil recurring human needs. Four case studies from indigenous groups in America, Polynesia and Australia (health clinic, meeting place, homeless centre, training camp) show how distinctive indigenous behaviour settings are being reinvented from traditional practices and combined with global architectural attributes, service and management practices to generate a new indigenous architecture, one which is contributing to a quality of lifestyle for the users.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-06-25}, booktitle = {The {Handbook} of {Contemporary} {Indigenous} {Architecture}}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Memmott, Paul}, editor = {Grant, Elizabeth and Greenop, Kelly and Refiti, Albert L. and Glenn, Daniel J.}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_31}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {831--868}, } @article{memmott_aboriginal_2004, title = {Aboriginal housing: has the state of the art improved?}, volume = {93}, shorttitle = {Aboriginal housing}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=12996854&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, number = {1}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Memmott, Paul}, year = {2004}, keywords = {Architecture, Housing}, pages = {46--48}, } @book{memmott_indigenous_2001, address = {Canberra}, series = {State of the environment {Australia} technical papers. {Series} 2}, title = {Indigenous {Settlements} of {Australia}}, url = {https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:9202}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, publisher = {Dept. of the Environment and Heritage}, author = {Memmott, Paul and Moran, Mark}, collaborator = {{Australia}}, year = {2001}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0] Medium: electronic resource}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban planning}, } @article{mokak_absence_2020, title = {In absence: 2019 {NGV} architecture commission: {Edition} office with {Yhonnie} {Scarce}}, volume = {109}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/ielapa.987534548064267}, abstract = {A collaboration between architect and artist, this poignant work in the gardens of the National Gallery of Victoria challenges the colonial legacy of art institutions, interrogating the absence of truth in the western canon and asking: how can architecture reconcile with the brutality of an unlawful and violent colonial history?}, language = {English}, number = {2}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Mokak, Louis Anderson and Hosking, Benjamin}, month = mar, year = {2020}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC, Australia Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {78--83}, } @techreport{moran_transformation_2007, title = {The {Transformation} of {Assets} for {Sustainable} {Livelihoods} in a {Remote} {Aboriginal} {Settlement}}, url = {https://www.nintione.com.au/resource/DKCRC-Rep-28-Transformation-of-Assets.pdf}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, institution = {Desert Knowledge CRC}, author = {Moran, Mark and Wright, Alyson and Renhan, Peter and Szava, Anna and Beard, Nerida and Rich, Elliat}, year = {2007}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture}, } @article{morphy_redefining_2008, title = {Redefining viability: {Aboriginal} homelands communities in north-east {Arnhem} {Land}}, volume = {43}, issn = {1839-4655}, shorttitle = {Redefining viability}, url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/j.1839-4655.2008.tb00109.x}, doi = {10.1002/j.1839-4655.2008.tb00109.x}, abstract = {The current policy debate about the future of small Indigenous homelands communities in remote Australia is being framed in terms of a narrow economic definition of ‘viability’, with little attention to factors such as the social characteristics of such communities and the health, well-being, and aspirations of those who choose to live there. The debate is taking place in the absence of comparative socio-demographic data on these communities as opposed to other kinds of settlements in remote Australia. This paper argues for a broader conceptualisation of viability. It outlines some reasons why governments might consider helping homelands communities to become more economically self-sufficient rather than starving them of support so that their inhabitants increasingly face a ‘choice’ between a marginalized and impoverished existence on the homelands and recentralisation in larger settlements. The argument is based on an analysis of ethnographic data from north-east Arnhem Land that demonstrate the social cohesiveness and functionality of homelands communities as compared to larger hub settlements.}, language = {en}, number = {3}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, journal = {Australian Journal of Social Issues}, author = {Morphy, Frances}, year = {2008}, note = {Number: 3 ZSCC: 0000018 \_eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/j.1839-4655.2008.tb00109.x}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {381--396}, } @article{mossman_indigenizing_2021, title = {Indigenizing practice: {Country} and architectural pedagogy}, volume = {110}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.137915585689514}, abstract = {In teaching architecture students at the University of Sydney School of Architecture, Michael Mossman, Associate Dean Indigenous, instils a dynamic design process that is situated within the presence of Country, and in continual dialogue and exchange with it.}, language = {English}, number = {6}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Mossman, Michael}, month = nov, year = {2021}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {24--26}, } @book{murcutt_architecture_2008, address = {Tokyo}, title = {The architecture of {Glenn} {Murcutt}}, isbn = {978-4-88706-293-1}, language = {jpn}, publisher = {TOTO Shuppan}, author = {Murcutt, Glenn and Gusheh, Maryam}, year = {2008}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @incollection{murphy_indigenous_2021, title = {Indigenous {Courthouse} and {Courtroom} {Design} in {Australia}: {Case} {Studies}, {Design} {Paradigms}, and the {Issue} of {Cultural} {Agency1}}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85141609032&doi=10.4324%2f9780429059858-7&partnerID=40&md5=80f040e614180c2815321bb9cf6f0778}, booktitle = {Courthouse {Architecture}, {Design} and {Social} {Justice}}, author = {Murphy, J.R. and Grant, E. and Anthony, T.}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.4324/9780429059858-7}, keywords = {architecture}, pages = {75--106}, } @inproceedings{murray_not_2020, address = {Perth}, title = {({Not}) {Royal} {Park}: {Recovering} the {Enduring} {Importance} of a {Kulin} {Nations} {Gathering} {Place} for {Culture}, {Health}, {Wellbeing} and {Healing}}, volume = {37}, url = {https://www.sahanz.net/wp-content/uploads/3A_419-426_MCGAW-ET-Al.pdf}, abstract = {Royal Park, Parkville, an area of windswept and open parkland just north of central Melbourne, has a long and complex history that has been well documented in historical studies and cultural heritage reports. Set aside early in the colony after La Trobe and his council petitioned for an area of 2560 acres to be reserved for “public advantage and recreation” and named in honour of the distant English monarch, it was quickly whittled down to 700 acres after gold was discovered. Land was needed for housing, experimental agriculture, a zoo, psychiatric asylum and hospitals in the rapidly expanding colony and this empty patch of land in close proximity to the town centre seemed suitable for ready appropriation. Later, during both world wars, it was used for a military camp that was subsequently taken over for low-cost housing, which became a notorious slum, before it was reclaimed as an area for sport and open space. Settler Australia has a long history of seeing empty land as a terra nullius, available for the pickings. But this particular patch of country has a deeper history as a Kulin Nation inter-tribal gathering site for ceremony, healing, law, trade and marriage. Over the past three decades Royal Park has received renewed attention by postcolonial historians, artists, activists and landscape architecture through discourse, performative arts practices and design, which have explored its unique ecology and broader cultural history. But the parkland’s enduring cultural significance for Indigenous people has had little attention. The authors draw on contemporary ethnographic research with, and Indigenist research by, Aboriginal people who work and use Royal Park for healing and cultural practices to this day. They argue that history is ever-present in Aboriginal culture and Royal Park remains what it always has been: a gathering place for culture, health, wellbeing and healing.}, language = {en}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {Society} of {Architectural} {Historians} {Australia} and {New} {Zealand}}, publisher = {SAHANZ}, author = {Murray, Uncle Gary and Kirby, Aunty Esther and Hunter, Sue-Anne and Rayner, Moira and White, Selena and Mongta, Sharon and Park, Royal}, month = dec, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {419--426}, } @article{mustapha_el_moussaoui_architectural_2024, title = {Architectural {Typology} and {Its} {Influence} on {Authentic} {Living}}, volume = {14}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/architectural-typology-influence-on-authentic/docview/2998422833/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.3390/buildings14030754}, abstract = {In this study, the transformative effects of architectural typologies on the community’s sense of belonging and relationship with their environment are examined. Through a range of investigative methodologies, the research highlights the shift from traditional architectural forms to contemporary designs, focusing on the role of political decisions, and globalized construction materials. The research examines a notable conflict: the modern spaces built with little spatial knowledge and modern material do not resonate with the community’s historical experiences and customary living patterns. Furthermore, the rapid pace of these architectural shifts has led to a growing sense of disconnection among community members. The findings highlight a central aspect: the new architectural forms fail to reflect the historical sentiments embedded in the community’s fabric and its connection to the surrounding environment. Consequently, there emerges a subtle yet significant loss of the community’s identity and heritage. The study argues for the importance of making design decisions that are sustainable, utilizing local construction knowledge in a modern way, thereby preserving the intricate and enduring connections between architectural, historical, social, and environmental factors. By doing so, designers can create spaces that preserve socio-cultural dynamics, be environmentally sustainable, yet also progress with the contemporary construction demands.}, language = {English}, number = {3}, journal = {Buildings}, author = {{Mustapha El Moussaoui}}, year = {2024}, note = {Place: Basel Publisher: MDPI AG}, keywords = {Architecture, Archives \& records, Bekaa Valley, Building And Construction, Built environment, Community, Concrete construction, Construction materials, Cultural heritage, Cultural identity, Decisions, Environmental factors, Evolution, Modernism, Narratives, Phenomenology, Qualitative research, Spatial data, Sustainable development, Typology, dwelling phenomenon, sustainable construction, well-being}, pages = {754}, } @article{nejad_indigenous_2020, title = {Indigenous placemaking and the built environment: toward transformative urban design}, volume = {25}, shorttitle = {Indigenous placemaking and the built environment}, url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13574809.2019.1641072}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1080/13574809.2019.1641072}, number = {4}, journal = {Journal of Urban Design}, author = {Nejad, Sarem and Walker, Ryan and Newhouse, David}, year = {2020}, note = {Number: 4 ZSCC: 0000011 Publisher: Taylor \& Francis}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {433--442}, } @article{nethercote_reconciling_2014, title = {Reconciling {Policy} {Tensions} on the {Frontlines} of {Indigenous} {Housing} {Provision} in {Australia}: {Reflexivity}, {Resistance} and {Hybridity}}, volume = {29}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {Reconciling {Policy} {Tensions} on the {Frontlines} of {Indigenous} {Housing} {Provision} in {Australia}}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2014.925098}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2014.925098}, abstract = {In Australia, significant recent reforms reposition Indigenous housing provision and management in remote and town camp communities under the mainstream public housing model. Two competing discourses surround this shift: a federal discourse of standardisation and state discourses of local responsiveness centred on the introduction of new community engagement processes into Indigenous public housing. This paper reports on qualitative research into the micro-scale of policy implementation to highlight policy-to-practice translation on the frontlines of Indigenous housing. Based on interviews with Indigenous housing stakeholders, this paper argues the capacity to support locally responsive housing management is problematic under the current arrangements. The analytical framework of realist governmentality reveals frontline housing professionals' role in the local resolution of tensions between federal and state policy levers. A focus on agent reflexivity and resistance on the frontline assists in capturing the dynamic (hybrid) identity of Indigenous public housing, as an atypical Australian example of hybridity in social housing.}, number = {8}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Nethercote, Megan}, month = nov, year = {2014}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2014.925098}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {1045--1072}, } @incollection{ngurra_yanama_2020, title = {Yanama {Budyari} {Gumada}, walk with good spirit as method: co-creating local environmental stewards on/with/as {Darug} {Ngurra}}, url = {https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-32-9694-7_3}, booktitle = {Located {Research}}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Ngurra, Darug and Dadd, Uncle Lex and Glass, Paul and Norman-Dadd, Aunty Corina and Hodge, Paul and Suchet-Pearson, Sandie and Graham, Marnie and Judge, Sara and Scott, Rebecca and Lemire, Jessica}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {15--37}, } @article{nikolakis_participatory_2020, title = {Participatory backcasting: {Building} pathways towards reconciliation?}, volume = {122}, issn = {0016-3287}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016328720300938}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2020.102603}, number = {September}, journal = {Futures}, author = {Nikolakis, William}, year = {2020}, note = {Publisher: Elsevier}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction, Landscape architecture, Property, Urban planning}, pages = {102603}, } @article{norris_ethnicity_2022, title = {Ethnicity, racism and housing: discourse analysis of {New} {Zealand} housing research}, volume = {37}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {Ethnicity, racism and housing}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1844159}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2020.1844159}, abstract = {Within the last decade, the notion of a housing crisis emerged as a key issue on national political agendas across nation-states. The overall decline in homeownership is even sharper along racial lines. The way race/ethnicity is captured in housing research has important implications for how racial disparities are explained and addressed. This paper uses a critical discourse analysis to examine how ethnicity and race are represented in New Zealand housing research published between 2013 and 2019. The analysis reveals a lack of attention devoted to explaining racial disparities in housing research. Only one article from a sample of 103 referenced the concepts ‘racism’ and ‘institutional racism’ to explain institutional barriers that adversely affect Indigenous people engaging with home-lending institutions. This paper argues that housing scholarship is an important space for understanding how policies institutionalize racism to exclude marginalized bodies, especially through predatory lending practices, loan denial, and segregation. This paper concludes with a discussion of the social implications of race-neutral explanations of housing-related issues.}, number = {8}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Norris, Adele N. and Nandedkar, Gauri}, month = sep, year = {2022}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1844159}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {1331--1349}, } @misc{north_australian_aboriginal_justice_agency_naaja_north_2016, title = {North {Australian} {Aboriginal} {Justice} {Agency}, “{Northern} {Territory} {Housing} {Issues} {Paper} and {Response} to the {Housing} {Strategy} {Consultation} {Draft},” {February} 2011.}, url = {https://www.aph.gov.au/DocumentStore.ashx?id=2fd7cf4e-9df6-4e86-8aa5-d8a7d3f2a06a&subId=561956}, urldate = {2022-06-29}, publisher = {Social Services Legislation Amendment (Housing Affordability) Bill 2017 Submission 32 - Attachment 1}, author = {North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA)}, year = {2016}, keywords = {Architecture, Housing}, } @incollection{nursey-bray_paying_2021, address = {Northampton}, title = {Paying attention to the spaces in between: the social production of space and {Indigenous} presence in cities}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7702519~S30}, booktitle = {Handbook on {Space}, {Place} and {Law}}, publisher = {Edward Elgar Publishing}, author = {Nursey-Bray, Melissa and Muecke, Stephen}, editor = {Bartel, Robyn and Carter, Jennifer}, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, } @article{obrien_blak_2020, title = {Blak box: {A} room for sound and a space for storytelling}, volume = {109}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/ielapa.987646345891816}, abstract = {In Indigenous Australia, “Country” is understood in a special way, characterized by connection. A mobile pavilion designed by Kevin O’Brien aims to convey this connection to Country by offering visitors a deep listening experience, rejecting stereotypes and positioning Indigeneity as “an interdependent condition with global connections.”}, language = {English}, number = {2}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {O’Brien, Kevin}, month = mar, year = {2020}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC, Australia Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {68--71}, } @incollection{orourke_aboriginal_2018, title = {Aboriginal and {Torres} {Strait} {Islander} {Domestic} {Architecture} in {Australia}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b6649655~S2}, booktitle = {The handbook of contemporary {Indigenous} architecture}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {O’Rourke, Timothy}, year = {2018}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {25--56}, } @article{orourke_uses_2020, title = {Uses of the {Vernacular} in the {Design} of {Indigenous} {Housing}}, volume = {30}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85083910671&doi=10.1080%2f10331867.2020.1721104&partnerID=40&md5=74d7b4f749ee4e7d3f516f3fd6bda372}, doi = {10.1080/10331867.2020.1721104}, number = {1}, journal = {Fabrications}, author = {O’Rourke, T.}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {68--91}, } @phdthesis{obrien_aboriginality_2006, address = {Brisbane}, type = {{MPhil} thesis}, title = {Aboriginality and architecture : built projects by {Merrima} and unbuilt projects on {Mer}}, shorttitle = {Aboriginality and architecture}, url = {https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:194135}, abstract = {Few occasions present an opportunity to withdraw from the time-cost mantra that constantly threatens to cripple design thinking in the 'real world' of architectural practice. As such, the following research by design is one of those rare moments permitting a sustained opportunity for insightful design reflection as a practitioner. It occurs after ten years of practical experience immersed in the subject at hand and lands squarely on the crossroads of my holistic architectural development. This is the net in which this document is cast.As a practitioner (and occasional design tutor), I am fascinated by the specific design problem of proposing a culturally responsive architecture. The projects I engage with are what I consider the fundamental projects that sponsor, support and affect the day-to-day events of the Aboriginal community at large. Put another way, I am constantly immersed in the dynamic relationship between Aboriginality and architecture due to my cultural, educational and professional experiences. The result is that I have collected a substantial array of experiences over the past decade that I now think needs to be re-considered and recorded (at the very least for posterity). As such, I am convinced that a design based form of research will allow me to draw upon these previous experiences in order to present a meaningful body of knowledge that will not only reveal a culturally derived design position but also illustrate it as an active agent\ in engaging hypothetical design case studies.This thesis document is, for the most part, a subjective document. This is the inherent nature of design and it has affected the research in its entirety. Through a series of design led considerations, this research comprises four parts that aim to illustrate the relationship between Aboriginality and architecture.The first part is a reconsideration of completed design projects (that I have been involved with to varying degrees) against a limited (but potent) body of literature that aims to establish certain semiotic, ideological and re-presentation issues relevant to an architecture engaging Aboriginal contexts. This opportunity for reconsideration reveals a further criterion of design meaning that becomes the basis for initiating the design case studies in the next stage.The second and third parts constitute a series of active design investigations. These parts take the previously revealed ideas of meaning and investigate three design case studies on Mer in the eastern Torres Strait Islands. Three projects provided extensive design investigation opportunities, namely, a Church building for the Church of the Torres Strait congregation, an Elders Meeting Place, and a Keeping Place and Workshop. Each project had particular idiosyncrasies that upon completion resulted in observations best described as design intent. It also became clear that there was 'something else' present in the completed projects that would shift the discussion in a new direction. The fourth part represents a period of reflection on the previous stage in order to reveal the 'something else' emerging as an unconscious design driver. It uncovers the notion of liminal space, or the space\ in between, as a means of broadening an understanding of the 'relationship' originally pursued. The three design case study projects are renewed specifically to find these liminal moments and extract an understanding of the greater condition. What is further encountered is the greater holistic context, or 'culture-scape', that any project is part of.The fundamental realization that occurred through this design research was the formulation of a Spatial Diagram that illustrated my perception of space (and time) as a cultural construct that anticipates those moments of symbiosis. This revelation has become the pivotal moment establishing a personal critical position from which I am able to evaluate a broader notion of architectural design in practice (and\ in education). As such the academic journey embedded within this document has delivered a set of findings that have sharpened my design thinking and reset a new course of exploration m my next stage of architectural practice.}, language = {eng}, school = {University of Queensland}, author = {O'Brien, Kevin}, year = {2006}, note = {ZSCC: 0000004}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{orourke_sharing_2016, title = {Sharing plans for {Aboriginal} housing}, volume = {105}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=117951399&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, number = {5}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {O'Rourke, Timothy}, year = {2016}, note = {tex.ids= orourkeSharingPlansAboriginal2016a}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {37--38}, } @incollection{page_gunyah_2000, title = {Gunyah, {Goondie} + {Wurley}: {The} {Aboriginal} {Architecture} of {Australia}}, isbn = {978-0-19-550649-5}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2607160~S30}, abstract = {The Companion is divided into two separate, but interconnected parts; part one is structured broadly on a chronological framework, offering a multi-perspective view of the diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art and culture; part two, the reference section extends the interpretative essays in part one, but also can be used as encyclopaedic entries; interpretative essays annotated individually.}, language = {en}, booktitle = {The {Oxford} {Companion} to {Aboriginal} {Art} and {Culture}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, author = {Page, Alison Joy}, editor = {Kleinert, Sylvia and Neale, Margo}, year = {2000}, note = {Google-Books-ID: jNGfAAAAMAAJ}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {423--426}, } @article{parris_seven_2018, title = {The seven lamps of planning for biodiversity in the city}, volume = {83}, url = {http://widgets.ebscohost.com/prod/customlink/proxify/proxify.php?count=1&encode=0&proxy=&find_1=&replace_1=&target=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&site=eds-live&scope=site&db=edselp&AN=S0264275117314245&authtype=sso&custid=s2775460}, doi = {10.1016/j.cities.2018.06.007}, journal = {Cities}, author = {Parris, , Kirsten M. and Amati, Marco and Bekessy, Sarah A and Dagenais, Danielle and Fryd, Ole and Hahs, Amy K and Hes,, Dominique and Imberger, Samantha J and Livesley, Stephen and Marshall, Adrian and Rhodes, Jonathan R and Threlfall, Caragh G. and Tingley, Reid and van der Ree, Rodney and Walsh, Christopher J. and Wilkerson, , Marit L. and Williams,, Nicholas}, year = {2018}, note = {44}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {44--53}, } @article{penfold_indigenous_2020, title = {Indigenous relational understandings of the house-as-home: embodied co-becoming with {Jerrinja} {Country}}, volume = {35}, issn = {0267-3037}, number = {9}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Penfold, Hilton and Waitt, Gordon and McGuirk, Pauline and Wellington, Alfred}, year = {2020}, note = {Number: 9 Publisher: Taylor \& Francis}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {1518--1533}, } @techreport{peter_self_2011, address = {Alice Springs, NT}, title = {Self {Build}: alternative housing procurement in remote {Indigenous} communities}, url = {https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5450868fe4b09b217330bb42/t/5475604be4b0cf9bc1846ae2/1416978507499/CAT-indigenous-self-build-study-2011.pdf}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, institution = {Centre for Appropriate Technology}, author = {Peter, Sonja and Ayora, Javier}, year = {2011}, note = {ZSCC: 0000001}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @misc{pholeros_constructing_2013, title = {Constructing and maintaining houses}, url = {https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/indigenous-australians/constructing-and-maintaining-houses/contents/table-of-contents}, publisher = {Closing the Gap clearinghouse: Australian Institute of Health and Welfare}, author = {Pholeros, Paul and Phibbs, Peter}, year = {2013}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, } @book{pieris_indigenous_2014, title = {Indigenous {Place}: {Contemporary} {Buildings}, {Landmarks} and {Places} of {Significance} in {South} {East} {Australia} and {Beyond}}, isbn = {978-0-7340-4902-5}, shorttitle = {Indigenous {Place}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b5346697~S2}, abstract = {Explores contemporary Indigenous place making; draws on examples of Indigenous cultural spaces from Australian metropolitan centres including Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, Canberra, Adelaide, Brisbane and Darwin, remote and regional areas; asks what makes a culturally appropriate representation of Aboriginality; surveyed cultural sites and facilities -- artworks, landscape and civic projects, purpose-built Aboriginal cultural centres and museums, commemorative sites, and political sites; discusses political struggles, decolonising ideas and community empowerment; joint project between University of Melbourne, Deakin University, the City of Melbourne Indigenous Arts Program, Reconciliation Victoria and The Victorian Traditional Owners Land Justice Group; launched as part of the 2014 Melbourne Indigenous Arts Festival.}, language = {en}, publisher = {Melbourne School of Design, Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, The University of Melbourne}, author = {Pieris, Anoma and Tootell, Naomi and McGaw, Janet and Berg, Rueben}, year = {2014}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban design, Urban planning}, } @article{pitts_dreaming_2021, title = {Dreaming the {Block} [{The} {Pemulwuy} {Project}, {Aboriginal} housing project at {Redfern} {NSW}.]}, volume = {97}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=34687659&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, doi = {10.3316/ielapa.200810589}, number = {5}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Pitts, Angela}, month = aug, year = {2021}, note = {Number: 5 ZSCC: 0000008 Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {105--111}, } @misc{pollard_bawoorrooga_nodate, title = {Bawoorrooga {SuperAdobe} {Earthhouse}}, url = {https://fish.asn.au/bawoorrooga-community/}, abstract = {There is an urgent need for a model of Indigenous housing that directly engages community, is sustainable, affordable, and easily-replicated. In 2020, FISH and}, language = {en-AU}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, journal = {Foundation for Indigenous Sustainable Health}, author = {Pollard, Jess}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @incollection{porter_indigenous_2020, title = {Indigenous {Cities}}, url = {https://cat.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8462527~S30}, booktitle = {Understanding {Urbanism}}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Porter, Libby}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, pages = {15--26}, } @incollection{porter_postcolonial_2017, title = {Postcolonial {Consequences} and {New} {Meanings}}, isbn = {1-315-69607-X}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b8789208~S30}, booktitle = {The {Routledge} {Handbook} of {Planning} {Theory}}, publisher = {Routledge}, author = {Porter, Libby}, year = {2017}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction, Property, Urban planning}, pages = {167--179}, } @incollection{porter_learning_2020, title = {Learning to {Live} {Lawfully} on {Country}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b7357709~S30}, booktitle = {Questioning {Indigenous}-{Settler} {Relations}}, publisher = {Springer}, author = {Porter, Libby}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction, Property, Urban planning}, pages = {137--146}, } @article{prentice_what_2020, title = {What are the impacts of living in social housing? {New} evidence from {Australia}}, volume = {35}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {What are the impacts of living in social housing?}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2019.1621995}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2019.1621995}, abstract = {In this paper, we apply statistical matching methods to a national longitudinal dataset of Australians facing housing insecurity to estimate the impacts of social housing on employment, education, health, incarceration and homelessness. We find social housing in Australia provides an important `safety net’ protecting people from homelessness. However, at least in the short run, individuals in social housing have similar outcomes in terms of employment, education, physical and mental health, and incarceration to other comparable individuals not in social housing. These are the first estimates of causal impacts of social housing, simultaneously estimating impacts on a range of shelter and non-shelter outcomes highlighted as important by the broader social housing literature. They also provide an interesting contrast with the existing US estimates. These results are potentially due to strict targeting of individuals into social housing and that they represent the average effect across individuals who may experience substantially different impacts.}, number = {4}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Prentice, David and Scutella, Rosanna}, month = apr, year = {2020}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2019.1621995}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {612--647}, } @article{puszka_politics_2022, title = {A politics of care in urban public housing: housing precarity amongst {Yolŋu} renal patients in {Darwin}}, volume = {37}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {A politics of care in urban public housing}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1831445}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2020.1831445}, abstract = {People with chronic diseases are likely to require some form of domestic care, however their care needs acquire low visibility in housing policy frameworks. Amongst Yolŋu (Indigenous Australians from north-east Arnhem Land), high rates of kidney disease reinforce needs for housing and care. I consider how access to housing shapes relations and practices of care in the families of Yolŋu renal patients in Darwin, Australia; and how Yolŋu relations and practices of care are implicated in housing policy. Through an ethnographic case study approach, I show that in Yolŋu families, practices of extending shelter to kin are care practices fundamental to the performance of domestic labour. I argue that while housing policy frameworks rely on familial relations and practices of care to reduce rough sleeping and achieve other policy objectives, Yolŋu relations and practices of care are also marginalised through the governance of public housing. The politics of care that play out in their places of residence reproduce housing precarity.}, number = {5}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Puszka, Stefanie}, month = may, year = {2022}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2020.1831445}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {769--788}, } @article{rajabipour_factors_2023, title = {Factors to be considered in the design of indigenous communities' houses, with a focus on {Australian} first nation housing in the {Northern} {Territory}}, volume = {8}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85152409967&doi=10.1016%2fj.deveng.2023.100109&partnerID=40&md5=a41c7915843ffd5658bca6ad4e29e204}, doi = {10.1016/j.deveng.2023.100109}, journal = {Development Engineering}, author = {Rajabipour, A. and Kutay, C. and Guenther, J. and Bazli, M.}, year = {2023}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, } @article{ray_reshaping_2024, title = {{RESHAPING} {LANDSCAPES}}, issn = {10334025}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/reshaping-landscapes/docview/3056813707/se-2?accountid=12372}, abstract = {The artistic counterpoints of Freddy Mamani and Doreen Chapman Featured in the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia's exhibition for the 24th Biennale of Sydney were two commissioned works by First Nations artists that made powerful statements about Indigenous heritage, identity and cultural reclamation. Doreen's art provides a means for her to communicate and share the stories that have shaped her life and her community. Rebecca Ray is a Meriam woman from the Torres Strait Islands and is the Curator of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Collections and Exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia.}, language = {English}, number = {338}, journal = {Art Monthly Australia, suppl. SPECIAL EDITION}, author = {Ray, Rebecca}, year = {2024}, note = {Place: Acton Publisher: Art Monthly Australia}, keywords = {Architecture, Art, Art galleries \& museums, Australia, Built environment, Commissioned works, Contemporary art, Infrastructure, Mamani, Freddy, Native peoples, Social exclusion}, pages = {22}, } @book{reed_tangled_2002, address = {Mulgrave, Vic}, title = {Tangled destinies: {National} {Museum} of {Australia}}, isbn = {978-1-876907-39-6}, shorttitle = {Tangled destinies}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2713871~S30}, publisher = {Images Publishing Group}, editor = {Reed, Dimity}, year = {2002}, note = {ZSCC: 0000013}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @article{rees_indigenizing_2020, title = {Indigenizing practice: {To} award, or not to award?}, volume = {109}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.587553501311273}, abstract = {In the first of a series of discussions on Indigenizing architectural practice in Australia, Sarah Lynn Rees speaks to practitioners about the place and process of Indigenous awards. The intent of this series is to raise awareness and integrate Indigenous material, conversations and perspectives into the content and themes explored in Architecture Australia.}, language = {English}, number = {6}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Rees, Sarah Lynn}, month = nov, year = {2020}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {22--25}, } @article{rees_blakitecture_2020, title = {Blakitecture: {Beyond} acknowledgement and into action}, volume = {109}, issn = {0003-8725}, url = {https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.987627712920558}, abstract = {The Blakitecture forums have become an annual feature at Melbourne’s MPavilion. Sarah Lynn Rees believes that, ultimately, they will play a part in normalizing Indigenous processes in architecture for all practitioners, Indigenous and non-Indigenous. In the meantime, the profession needs to simply get on with implementing the lessons we have already learnt.}, language = {English}, number = {2}, urldate = {2023-05-08}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Rees, Sarah Lynn}, month = mar, year = {2020}, note = {Place: South Melbourne, VIC Publisher: Architecture Media}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture}, pages = {64--66}, } @incollection{revell_enough_2018, address = {Singapore}, title = {Enough is {Enough}: {Indigenous} {Knowledge} {Systems}, {Living} {Heritage} and the ({Re}) {Shaping} of {Built} {Environment} {Design} {Education} in {Australia}}, booktitle = {The {Handbook} of {Contemporary} {Indigenous} {Architecture}}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, author = {Revell, G and Heyes, S and {Jones, D} and Choy, D L and Tucker, R and Bird, S}, editor = {Grant, E and Greenop, K and Refiti, A L and Glenn, D J}, year = {2018}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous knowledge, Urban and cultural heritage, Urban design}, pages = {465--493}, } @article{riva_social_2021, title = {Social housing construction and improvements in housing outcomes for {Inuit} in {Northern} {Canada}}, volume = {36}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85084303034&doi=10.1080%2f02673037.2020.1739233&partnerID=40&md5=4b2dce74f4daca4854e1132e74148dfe}, doi = {10.1080/02673037.2020.1739233}, abstract = {One-third of Inuit households in the Canadian Arctic are in core housing need-three times the national average. In 2014–2015, over 400 social housing units were constructed in Nunavik and Nunavut, two of the four Inuit land claims regions in Canada. This article examines whether rehousing, following this large-scale construction commitment, is associated with significant improvements in housing outcomes. People on the waiting list for social housing were recruited in 12 communities in Nunavik and Nunavut. Of the 186 adults who were rehoused, 102 completed the study. Questionnaires were administered 1–6 months before and 15–18 months after rehousing. After rehousing, household crowding, major repairs needed, and thermal discomfort were significantly reduced. The sense of home, including factors such as perceived control, privacy, and identity, improved significantly post-move. Social housing construction significantly improves living conditions in Nunavik and Nunavut. Integration of housing and social policies are needed to maximize benefits of new housing construction and to avoid or mitigate unintended effects. © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor \& Francis Group.}, number = {7}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Riva, M. and Perreault, K. and Dufresne, P. and Fletcher, C. and Muckle, G. and Potvin, L. and Bailie, R. and Baron, M.}, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture, Canada, Housing, Property}, pages = {973--993}, } @article{robertson_caring_2019, title = {Caring for {Country}: how remote communities are building on payment for ecosystem services}, shorttitle = {Caring for {Country}}, url = {http://theconversation.com/caring-for-country-how-remote-communities-are-building-on-payment-for-ecosystem-services-116737}, abstract = {We now have a proven model for supporting self-determined building on Aboriginal homelands. The next question is how can its reach be extended?}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, journal = {The Conversation}, author = {Robertson, Hannah}, month = jun, year = {2019}, note = {ZSCC: 0000002}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction}, } @article{robertson_dormitories_2020, title = {Dormitories: {Single} men's housing in remote {Indigenous} {Australia}}, volume = {109}, shorttitle = {Dormitories}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=145333839&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, number = {5}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Robertson, Hannah}, year = {2020}, note = {Publisher: Architecture Media South Melbourne, VIC}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {26--28}, } @inproceedings{robertson_designing_2020, title = {Designing the {Olkola} cultural knowledge centre: {A} traditional owner-led integrated research and education process}, volume = {2020-November}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85103656997&partnerID=40&md5=cc18aef1aa47c675ab30eff15b221099}, author = {Robertson, H. and Ross-Symonds, D. and Connolly, P.}, year = {2020}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction, Indigenous, Sustainability}, pages = {375--384}, } @article{robertson_building_2018, title = {Building in ways that meet the needs of {Australia}’s remote regions}, url = {http://theconversation.com/building-in-ways-that-meet-the-needs-of-australias-remote-regions-106071}, abstract = {Centralised policies are not meeting the needs of remote Indigenous settlements. Increasing their decision-making input and the role of local industry can overcome the challenges of building remotely.}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, journal = {The Conversation}, author = {Robertson, Hannah}, month = dec, year = {2018}, note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction}, } @article{sallese_embedding_2024, title = {Embedding {Indigenous} {Knowledge} into {Housing} {Design} with the {Homebuilding} {Students} in {Wasagamack} and {Garden} {Hill} {First} {Nations}, {Manitoba}, {Canada}}, volume = {15}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85193715199&doi=10.29173%2fcjnser582&partnerID=40&md5=8d84c49e201dfd9ef90fd6c2ed8f3366}, doi = {10.29173/cjnser582}, abstract = {Wasagamack and Garden Hill First Nations in Island Lake, Manitoba, are experiencing a housing crisis, with severe overcrowding. This article describes a research analysis of local materials, building skill levels, environment, demographics, and cultural aspects completed by graduate students in interior design as part of collaborative design/build activities, training programs, and community workshops. This study is part of a First Nation community/university partnership. Healthy, culturally appropriate, resilient single-and extended-family homes were designed using local materials and labour. This pilot project offers a pathway to build capacity to fill the gap of 150,000 homes in a way that advances cultural, health, social, and economic development. Further, a decolonizing policy and the provision of adequate infrastructure, such as access roads, in Indigenous reserves are needed to create a sustainable home-building ecosystem. © 2024 Canadian Journal of Nonprofit and Social Economy Research.}, number = {1}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Nonprofit and Social Economy Research}, author = {Sallese, C. and Mallory-Hill, S. and Thompson, S.}, year = {2024}, keywords = {54141:Interior Design Services, Architecture, Business And Economics, Canada, Infrastructure, Interior design, Inuit, Local materials, Manitoba Canada, Mortgages, Native North Americans, Students}, pages = {28--45}, } @book{samridhi_investigating_2024, series = {Advances in {Librarianship}}, title = {Investigating {Alternate} {World} {Views}: {Implications} for {Design}, {Architecture} and {Cultural} {Records}}, volume = {54}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85182787080&doi=10.1108%2fS0065-283020240000054012&partnerID=40&md5=60a86ca5a525e6408839013283f9dfcd}, author = {Samridhi, S. and Windl, Y.L.}, year = {2024}, doi = {10.1108/S0065-283020240000054012}, note = {Pages: 161}, keywords = {Architecture, Indigenous knowledge systems}, } @article{sanders_is_2008, title = {Is {Homeownership} the {Answer}? {Housing} {Tenure} and {Indigenous} {Australians} in {Remote} (and {Settled}) {Areas}}, volume = {23}, issn = {0267-3037}, shorttitle = {Is {Homeownership} the {Answer}?}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/02673030802030014}, doi = {10.1080/02673030802030014}, abstract = {This paper examines the relevance of recently floated policy ideas for extending homeownership to remote Aboriginal Australians. It argues that while the housing tenure system in more densely settled Australia is dominated by homeownership, this is not, and cannot realistically be expected to be, the case in remote areas. The paper uses data from the 2001 Census, organized by remoteness geography, to demonstrate the different character of the housing tenure system in remote Australia. The paper argues that homeownership in remote Aboriginal communities is a somewhat unrealistic policy goal, given the underlying income and employment status of Indigenous people in these communities. The paper also argues that there are better measures of Indigenous housing need and disadvantage in Australia than low homeownership rates. It briefly reports on one past failed experiment in Queensland to introduce homeownership to a remote Aboriginal community.}, number = {3}, urldate = {2023-05-09}, journal = {Housing Studies}, author = {Sanders, Will}, month = may, year = {2008}, note = {Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02673030802030014}, keywords = {Architecture, Property}, pages = {443--460}, } @incollection{scally_outstation_2003, address = {Red Hill, ACT}, title = {Outstation {Design} – {Lessons} from {Bawinanga} {Aboriginal} {Corporation} in {Arnhem} {Land}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2854211~S30}, booktitle = {Take 2: housing design in {Indigenous} {Australia}}, publisher = {Australian Institute of Architects}, author = {Scally, Simon}, editor = {Chambers, Catherine}, collaborator = {Memmott, Paul and Go Sam, Carroll}, year = {2003}, note = {Book Authors: \_:n3602 ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0] Publisher: Royal Australian Institute of Architects}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @misc{shuba_krishnan_anger_2016, title = {Anger over {NT} {Aboriginal} living conditions sparks legal action}, url = {https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-10/anger-over-nt-town-camps-sparks-legal-action/7157888}, abstract = {Unrest over the state of accommodation in the "utmost despair" in NT Aboriginal town camps is spreading, with unprecedented legal action underway and a call for a parliamentary inquiry from angry residents.}, urldate = {2022-06-28}, journal = {ABC News}, author = {{Shuba Krishnan} and {Katherine Gregory}}, month = feb, year = {2016}, keywords = {Architecture, Housing, Urban planning}, } @article{spark_brambuk_2002, title = {Brambuk living cultural centre: {Indigenous} culture and the production of place}, volume = {2}, issn = {1468-7976}, shorttitle = {Brambuk living cultural centre}, url = {https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1468797602002001095}, doi = {10.1177/1468797602002001095}, abstract = {The article examines the production of tourist space in relation to Brambuk, an Aboriginal cultural centre in Victoria, Australia. In doing so, it draws on Tim Edensor’s discussion of heterogeneous and enclavic spaces, and the narratives of staff and visitors at the cultural centre. The article demonstrates the positive outcomes of heterogeneous space and the limitations of enclavic space for indigenous people seeking to represent themselves within the tourist domain. This exploration produces critical commentary about a range of subjects, including Aboriginal involvement in cultural tourism and visitor responses to Aboriginal cultural centres, both of which are underresearched fields of inquiry. In addition, the significance of indigenous ownership to the representation of Aboriginality in the tourist domain is noted.}, language = {en}, number = {1}, urldate = {2021-08-24}, journal = {Tourist Studies}, author = {Spark, Ceridwen}, month = apr, year = {2002}, note = {Number: 1 ZSCC: 0000036 Publisher: SAGE Publications}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture}, pages = {23--42}, } @misc{spatial_agency_merrima_2021, title = {Merrima {Design}}, url = {https://www.spatialagency.net/database/merrima.group}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, author = {{Spatial Agency,}}, month = aug, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban planning}, } @article{spence_brambuk-living-cultural-centre_1988, title = {Brambuk-{Living}-{Cultural}-{Centre} {Halls}-{Gap}, the {Grampians}-{National}-{Park}, {Victoria}, {Architects} {Greg}-{Burgess}-{Pty}-{Ltd}}, volume = {184}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/trade-journals/brambuk-living-cultural-centre/docview/1366926796/se-2}, number = {1100}, journal = {Architectural Review}, author = {Spence, Rory}, year = {1988}, note = {Number: 1100 ZSCC: 0000005 Publisher: EMAP BUSINESS PUBLISHING LTD 151 ROSEBERY AVE, LONDON, ENGLAND EC1R 4QX}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {88--90}, } @article{stead_semblance_2004, title = {The semblance of populism: {National} {Museum} of {Australia}}, volume = {9}, issn = {1360-2365}, shorttitle = {The semblance of populism}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1080/13602360412331296170}, doi = {10.1080/13602360412331296170}, number = {3}, journal = {The Journal of Architecture}, author = {Stead, Naomi}, month = sep, year = {2004}, note = {Number: 3 Publisher: Routledge \_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/13602360412331296170}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {385--396}, } @incollection{strazzeri_integrating_2023, title = {Integrating {Indigenous} {Lifestyle} in {Net}-{Zero} {Energy} {Buildings}. {A} {Case} {Study} of {Energy} {Retrofitting} of a {Heritage} {Building} in the {Southwest} of {Western} {Australia}}, volume = {Part F3685}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85210565820&doi=10.1007%2f978-981-99-2695-4_24&partnerID=40&md5=69b4a2ea183c0727b1d270c5c28c21af}, booktitle = {Urban {Sustainability}}, author = {Strazzeri, V. and Tiwari, R.}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1007/978-981-99-2695-4_24}, keywords = {Architecture, Heritage}, pages = {407--432}, } @article{sukkasame_collaboration_2021, title = {Collaboration and {Participation} in {Architectural} {Design}: {Lesson} {Learnt} from {Building} a {Bamboo} {Pavilion} with {Indigenous} {Karen}}, volume = {18}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85180696532&doi=10.56261%2fjars.v18i1.241881&partnerID=40&md5=fc40bc12608e149658fe4d024ebe35b5}, doi = {10.56261/jars.v18i1.241881}, number = {1}, journal = {Journal of Architectural/Planning Research and Studies}, author = {Sukkasame, S. and Alhashimy, M.F.}, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban design}, pages = {187--198}, } @phdthesis{thorner_self-centering_2003, type = {{PhD} {Thesis}}, title = {Self-{Centering} {Aboriginalities}: {An} {Examination} of {Three} {Aboriginal} {Cultural} {Centers} in {Southeastern} {Australia}}, shorttitle = {Self-{Centering} {Aboriginalities}}, url = {https://cat2.lib.unimelb.edu.au:443/record=b2833124~S30}, school = {University of Melbourne, Faculty of Arts}, author = {Thorner, Sabra G.}, year = {2003}, note = {ZSCC: 0000001}, keywords = {Architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, } @misc{tindale_map_1940, address = {Adelaide}, title = {Map showing the distribution of the {Aboriginal} tribes of {Australia} [cartographic material]}, url = {https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-230054338}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, publisher = {Govt. Photolithographer}, author = {Tindale, Norman}, year = {1940}, note = {Cartographers: \_:n2500}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, } @article{yabuka_tjuntjuntjara_2007, title = {Tjuntjuntjara {Housing}: {Iredale} {Pedersen} {Hook}'s {Tjuntjuntjara} {Housing} in the {Great} {Victorian} {Desert}}, volume = {96}, shorttitle = {Tjuntjuntjara {Housing}}, url = {https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=sso&db=vth&AN=25188256&site=ehost-live&custid=s2775460}, number = {3}, journal = {Architecture Australia}, author = {Yabuka, Narelle}, year = {2007}, note = {Publisher: ARCHITECTURE MEDIA AUSTRALIA PTY LTD}, keywords = {Architecture}, pages = {70}, } @article{yates_transformative_2023, title = {A {Transformative} {Architectural} {Pedagogy} and {Tool} for a {Time} of {Converging} {Crises}}, volume = {7}, url = {https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/transformative-architectural-pedagogy-tool-time/docview/2791742120/se-2?accountid=12372}, doi = {10.3390/urbansci7010001}, abstract = {The institutional frameworks within which we conceive, design, construct, inhabit and manage our built environments are widely acknowledged to be key factors contributing to converging ecological crises: climate change, biodiversity loss, environmental degradation, and social inequity at a global scale. Yet, our ability to respond to these emergencies remains largely circumscribed by educational and professional agendas inherited from 20th-century Western paradigms. As the crises intensify, there is a compelling case for radical change in the educational and professional structures of the built environment disciplines. This paper presents a work-in-progress examination of an emergent architecture programme at Te Wānanga Aronui O Tāmaki Makau Rau/Auckland University of Technology (AUT), Aotearoa New Zealand. The program is within Huri Te Ao/the School of Future Environments, a transdisciplinary entity formed in 2020 to integrate research and teaching across Architecture, Built Environment Engineering, and Creative Technologies. The school itself is conceived as a collaborative project to co-create an outward-facing civic research platform for sharing ecologically positive design thinking across diverse communities of practice. The programme foregrounds mātauranga Māori (Indigenous ways of knowing), transdisciplinary systems, and regenerative design as regional place-oriented contributions to planetary-scaled transformation. We illustrate and evaluate a specific curriculum change tool, the Living Systems Wellbeing (LSW) Compass. Grounded in Te Ao Māori (Māori cosmology and context), the Compass offers a graphic means for students to navigate and integrate ecological relationships at different scales and levels of complexity, as well as affords insights into alternative foundational narratives, positive values, design strategies, and professional practices. This paper identifies four foundational factors for transformative pedagogies. The first factor is the value of a collectively held and clearly articulated vision and focus. The second factor is the capacity and commitment of an academic team that supports and values the vision. Thirdly, the vision needs to meet and acknowledge place-specific knowledges and values. Finally, the pedagogy should have an action research component founded in real-world interactions. While this research-based pedagogy is place-based and specific, we argue that these four factors are transferable to other learning institutions and can support critical pedagogies for social, cultural, and ecological wellbeing.}, language = {English}, number = {1}, journal = {Urban Science}, author = {Yates, Amanda and {Maibritt Pedersen Zari} and Bloomfield, Sibyl and Burgess, Andrew and Walker, Charles and Waghorn, Kathy and Besen, Priscila and Sargent, Nick and Palmer, Fleur}, year = {2023}, note = {Place: Basel Publisher: MDPI AG}, keywords = {Action research, Architecture, Australia, Biodiversity, Built environment, Change agents, Climate change, Cosmology, Crises, Critical theory, Curricula, Design, Design thinking, Environmental degradation, Habitats, Housing And Urban Planning, Indigenous knowledge, Inequality, Maoris, New Zealand, Pedagogy, Professional practice, Regenerative design, Regional variations, Teaching, Teams, Transformation, Values, Well being, architectural education, climate emergency, climate justice, ecological emergency, mauri ora, pedagogy, regenerative architecture, socio-ecologically positive design, system change}, pages = {1}, } @misc{noauthor_university_2021, title = {University of {Melbourne} {Arts} {West} / {ARM} {Architecture}}, url = {https://armarchitecture.com.au/projects/university-of-melbourne-arts-west/}, abstract = {Arts West is a University of Melbourne landmark. Its striking façade features images of objects from the University's cultural collections.}, urldate = {2021-06-24}, month = jun, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @misc{noauthor_australian_2021, title = {The {Australian} {Institute} of {Aboriginal} and {Torres} {Strait} {Islander} {Studies} {ARM} {Architecture}}, url = {https://www.australian-architects.com/en/arm-architecture-melbourne/project/the-australian-institute-of-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-studies}, abstract = {The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) is Australia's leading centre for the research of our early Australian...}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, journal = {Australian-Architects}, month = aug, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @misc{noauthor_letters_2021, title = {Letters and {Fixes}: {Architecture} {Australia}, {July} 2001}, url = {https://architectureau.com/articles/letters-and-fixes-6/}, urldate = {2021-08-20}, journal = {Architecture AU}, month = aug, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture}, } @misc{noauthor_centre_2021, title = {Centre for {Appropriate} {Technology} ({CfAT})}, url = {https://cfat.org.au}, abstract = {The Centre for Appropriate Technology was established in 1980 to research, design, develop and teach appropriate technologies and deliver technical training to Indigenous people living in remote communities. Today, CfAT continues to connect people and country through technology to inspire better liv}, urldate = {2021-10-04}, journal = {Centre for Appropriate Technology}, month = oct, year = {2021}, keywords = {Architecture, Construction}, } @misc{noauthor_mtalksblakitecture_nodate, title = {{MTalks}—{BLAKitecture}: {Challenging} the {System}}, shorttitle = {{MTalks}—{BLAKitecture}}, url = {https://soundcloud.com/mpavilion/mtalksblakitecture-challenging-the-system}, abstract = {Architecture operates within colonial systems. These systems are often at odds with caring for Country practices, genuine participatory design practices and equity of opportunity. If you trace the sy}, language = {en}, urldate = {2023-07-19}, keywords = {architecture, urban planning}, } @misc{noauthor_struggle_1995, title = {The struggle for the {Musgrave} {Park} {Aboriginal} {Cultural} {Centre}}, url = {https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/struggle-musgrave-park-aboriginal-cultural-centre}, abstract = {The struggle for the Musgrave Park Aboriginal Cultural Centre By Anthony Brown BRISBANE — Just a stone's throw from the new convention centre is one of the city's most famous public parks — Musgrave Park. Besides being a favourite site for major}, language = {en}, urldate = {2021-08-26}, journal = {Green Left}, month = nov, year = {1995}, note = {Publisher: Green Left}, keywords = {Architecture, Landscape architecture, Urban and cultural heritage}, }