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Reconciling policy tensions on the frontlines of Indigenous housing provision in Australia: reflexivity, resistance and hybridity

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 17:25 authored by Megan NethercoteMegan Nethercote
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.

History

Journal

Housing Studies

Volume

29

Issue

8

Start page

1045

End page

1072

Total pages

28

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Taylor & Francis

Former Identifier

2006049008

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-22