TY - RPRT TI - Improving housing and service responses to domestic and family violence for Indigenous individuals and families AU - Cripps, Kyllie AU - Habibis, Daphne CY - Melbourne DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 PB - Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute Limited SN - AHURI Final Report No. 320 UR - https://ssrn.com/abstract=3545703 KW - Architecture KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Sustaining housing through planned maintenance in remote Central Australia AU - Grealy, Liam AU - Lea, Tess AU - Moskos, Megan AU - Benedict, Richard AU - Habibis, Daphne AU - King, Stephanie T2 - Housing Studies AB - 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. DA - 2022/06/14/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 23 SN - 0267-3037 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2022.2084045 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:31 KW - Architecture KW - Indigenous housing policy KW - Maintenance KW - Property KW - environmental health KW - healthy housing KW - housing quality KW - sustainability ER - TY - JOUR TI - Australian Housing Policy, Misrecognition and Indigenous Population Mobility AU - Habibis, Daphne T2 - Housing Studies AB - 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. DA - 2013/07/01/ PY - 2013 DO - 10.1080/02673037.2013.759545 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 28 IS - 5 SP - 764 EP - 781 SN - 0267-3037 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2013.759545 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:13:24 KW - Architecture KW - Property ER - TY - JOUR TI - Housing policy in remote Indigenous communities: how politics obstructs good policy AU - Habibis, Daphne AU - Phillips, Rhonda AU - Phibbs, Peter T2 - Housing Studies DA - 2019/// PY - 2019 DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2018.1487039 VL - 34 IS - 2 SP - 252 EP - 271 J2 - Housing Studies SN - 0267-3037 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02673037.2018.1487039 KW - Architecture KW - Property KW - Urban planning ER -