
Edgar Liu
Articles
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Dec 5, 2023 |
phrp.com.au | Jason Prior |Edgar Liu |Evelyne de Leeuw |Nicky Morrison
Dear author,Thank you for your interest in submitting your work to Public Health Research and Practice (PHRP). The Journal is currently transitioning to a new publishing model. This will see us move from the current model of publishing papers in four editions each year to a continuous publishing model where papers are published online as soon as feasible following peer review. This change will occur for papers published from 1st January 2025.
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Dec 5, 2023 |
phrp.com.au | Jason Prior |Edgar Liu |Evelyne de Leeuw |Nicky Morrison
Urban planning and development for health - an inter- and multidisciplinary pursuit
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Oct 24, 2023 |
apo.org.au | Edgar Liu |Kylie Valentine |Deb Batterham |Wendy Stone
Description This research investigates the key links between housing and poverty. Its purpose is to draw together different dimensions of the relationships between housing costs and poverty, including policy settings, tax and transfer systems, housing assistance and place-based dimensions and individual capabilities. The causal relationships between housing and poverty are complicated. Housing costs commonly comprise the largest share of living costs and can increase the risk of poverty.
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Sep 24, 2023 |
canadianinquirer.net | Patrick Harris |UNSW Sydney |Edgar Liu
The housing crisis is firmly on the Australian policy agenda. Governments see a rapid increase in supply as the main solution. The importance of supply is not disputed. But more housing alone isn’t enough: new housing must be provided in ways that do not widen the gap between the “haves and the have-nots”. Our recent research in Sydney, for instance, shows how the planning system already overlooks what is needed to make the city equitable and liveable.
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Sep 22, 2023 |
theconversation.com | Patrick Harris |Edgar Liu
The housing crisis is firmly on the Australian policy agenda. Governments see a rapid increase in supply as the main solution. The importance of supply is not disputed. But more housing alone isn’t enough: new housing must be provided in ways that do not widen the gap between the “haves and the have-nots”. Our recent research in Sydney, for instance, shows how the planning system already overlooks what is needed to make the city equitable and liveable.
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