A Survey of Community Engagement in Australian Local Government

Title
A Survey of Community Engagement in Australian Local Government
Publication Date
2012
Author(s)
Grant, Bligh
Dollery, Brian E
Kortt, Michael A
Blackwell, Boyd
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8143-158X
Email: bblackw2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:bblackw2
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Open Journal Systems
Place of publication
Thailand
UNE publication id
une:12342
Abstract
In the quest for both enhanced local democracy (Aulich 2009) and increased economic prosperity founded in 'place-based' policy-making (Lyons 2007), community engagement has become an established technique of Australian local government planning and decision-making. While several commentators have considered the normative validity of community engagement strategies (see, for example, Grant and Dollery 2011) and others have conducted detailed studies of particular jurisdictional contexts (Prior and Herriman 2010; Wiseman 2006), to date a comparative study of the different Australian local government systems has not been forthcoming. As an initial step toward undertaking this comprehensive empirical task, this paper examines the legislative and regulatory frameworks for community engagement in Australian local government jurisdictions. It is argued that the characteristics of Australia's federal system are played out in this policy arena, such that differences between the state and territory frameworks enable the promise of place-based policy making to be felt at the local community level.
Link
Citation
Journal of African & Asian Local Government Studies, 1(4), p. 1-29
ISSN
2286-7104
Start page
1
End page
29

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