Planning for social inclusion in a multicultural urban South East Queensland (original) (raw)
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Population growth has profound impacts on Australian life, and sorting myths from facts can be difficult. This article is part of our series, Is Australia Full?, which aims to help inform a wide-ranging and often emotive debate. Western Sydney is one of the fastest-growing regions in Australia. It's also one of the most culturally and linguistically diverse, as a key arrival point for refugees and new migrants when they first settle in Australia. Many people in culturally diverse populations in Western Sydney have lived in Australia for many years, if not several generations.
Southern Brisbane Suburban Forum Inc.'s Briefing on the State SEQ Plan
Dr Neville Buch (ABN 86703686642), 2023
The Southern Brisbane Suburban Forum Inc. is a local volunteer organization that has been formed to give a democratic voice to the local community. The Forum sees the coming together of people from diverse business and community interests to show a cooperative way to create and inform change in partnership with different decision makers. This is a teaching document in urban studies and urban sociology. The document addresses critical problems in the State Government’s South East Queensland Regional Plan 2023 Update (SEQRP). National Parks (Maps 3, 26) has historically been thin on the South East Queensland landscape. The key message of the South East Queensland’s urban sociology is the history of the totalising urban sprawl on top of the environment history in massive land clearance for the early stages of rural industries (1842-1925). The two years in the parenthesis relates to the first development of Brisbane township (1842) to the formation of the Greater Brisbane Council (1925). This is the very reason why National Parks (Map 3) has historically been thin on the South East Queensland landscape, and the strips of agriculture land, in Map 26, is all that is left from the urban sprawl. The problem of contemporary city and regional planning is that it is in the forgetfulness, or perhaps isolation-thinking, to the big-picture trends of urban histories and in critical local studies. In other words, there is very poor ecological thinking, not merely as to “the natural” environment, but sufficient thinking to “the human” environment” which is 100% in ‘the natural’ thought paradigm.