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The Spatial Dynamics of Homelessness in Australia: Urbanisation, Intra-City Dynamics and Affordable Housing

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 19:52 authored by Deb Batterham, Melek CigdemMelek Cigdem, Sharon Parkinson, Margaret Reynolds, Gavin WoodGavin Wood
While homelessness in Australia has remained relatively stable at the national level, its spatial distribution is becoming more nuanced. This paper draws on homelessness estimates produced by the Australian Bureau of Statistics to explore the spatial dynamics of homelessness in Australia over a fifteen-year period. Building on existing work, we show that homelessness is becoming more urbanised with evidence of spatial convergence, mainly driven by a surge in severe crowding in our major cities. However, when exploring intra-city patterns, we find distinctive intra-city spatial dynamics featuring strong suburbanisation of ‘couch surfing’ in state capital cities, contrasting with shifts in severe crowding numbers toward middle and inner regions of most state capitals. We argue that these dynamics reflect the retreat of affordable rental housing supply to the outer suburban fringe, and the coping strategies that ‘couch surfers’ and those aspiring to live in the inner cities are compelled to follow in response to the changing spatial configuration of affordable housing.

History

Journal

Applied Spatial Analysis and Policy

Volume

15

Issue

4

Start page

1021

End page

1043

Total pages

23

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2022

Former Identifier

2006115290

Esploro creation date

2023-03-04

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