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TUDLab Research Projects Migration and Liveability

Migration and Liveability

TUDLab is interested in urban growth in regional towns and cities and how to promote sustainable development in local planning and urban design. Regional areas necessitate place-based strategies that draw on their local cultures and strengths rather than superimposing policies from other urban areas.

The research explores these issues in relation to migration, and what drives Australian and international migrants to choose regional towns and cities as destinations to live and work. It examines the profile of recent migrants to understand impulses behind their mobility, explores the jobs they undertake/businesses they bring and identifies key amenities affecting migration decisions. It works with wide range of key stakeholders to help deliver strategies for sustainable regional development.

Research team: Rana Dadpour, Nick Osbaldiston, Lisa Law

Related information:

Interview with Rana Dadpour 27 August 2021: Hope and expectation: why Aussies are going regional.

Media Release 4 Feb 2021: Planning for COVID-driven regional growth

Osbaldiston, Nick (2022) The View of Lifestyle Migration: a Brief Exploration of the Ethics of Seeking a Better Way of Life. In: Robertson, Shanthi, and Roberts, Rosie, (eds.) Rethinking Privilege and Social Mobility in Middle-Class Migration. Routledge, London, pp. 130-149

Osbaldiston, Nick (2022)  Australian Geographer. (In Press)

Osbaldiston, Nick, Picken, Felicity, and Denny, Lisa (2021)  In: Harkness, Alistair, and White, Rob, (eds.) Crossroads of Rural Crime: Representations and Realities of Transgression in the Australian Countryside. Emerald Publishing, Bingley, U.K., pp. 149-166.

Osbaldiston, Nick, Picken, Felicity, and Denny, Lisa (2020)  Population, Space and Place, 26. e2328.

Osbaldiston, Nick, Denny, Lisa, and Picken, Felicity (2020)  Australasian Journal of Regional Studies, 26 (1). pp. 55-76.

Guaralda, M, Hearn, G, Foth, M, Yigitcanlar, T, Mayere, S and L Law (2020) , Sustainability 12.