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Are metropolitan planning frameworks healthy? The case of Melbourne 2030

conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Iain Butterworth, Giuseppina Palermo, Lauren Prosser
This paper presents preliminary findings of a project investigating the integration and application of ecological public health principles in Melboume 2030, the Victorian Government's urban planning blueprint for Melboume for the next 30 years. The study examines the political, organisational, social, and inter-personal factors that impact on the integration and application of broad health considerations into urban planning policy in Victoria. We are testing the premise that achieving integrated planning requires a systematic integration of government activity across sectors. Using discourse analysis and key informant interviews, we examined relevant government policy and legislation and its implementation against world's best practice. Preliminary findings show that the degree of leadership in relation to deploying the mission, and implementation processes sustain or impede integrated planning at a whole-of-government and intersectoral level.

These findings may inform a much-needed national agenda on promoting health through integrated planning. Findings will identify future research directions and action to bridge the gap between urban planning and health planning systems

History

Event

State of Australian Cities Conference (2nd : 2005 : Brisbane, Qld.)

Publisher

Griffith University

Location

Brisbane, Australia

Place of publication

Nathan, Qld.

Start date

2005-11-30

End date

2005-12-02

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed

Title of proceedings

State of Australian cities conference 2005

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