Journal
JOURNAL OF PREVENTION & INTERVENTION IN THE COMMUNITY
Volume 44, Issue 4, Pages 272-282Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10852352.2016.1197723
Keywords
Housing data; Indigenous housing and health; policy; SIHIP
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Funding
- ARC Queen Elizabeth II Research Fellowship [DP1094139]
- Australian Research Council [DP1094139] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
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This article explores why it is so difficult to provide and sustain decent public housing in Indigenous communities, highlighting the curious role that data reporting and analysis plays in perpetuating this state of affairs. Drawing on data amassed by the Housing for Health (HFH) program that has focused on health hardware functionality in almost 9,000 houses in over 215 communities across Australia, we note inroads made to the language of policy (through, for example, the development of a National Indigenous Housing Guide). However, we also note the more limited effect on those policy practices that ordain substandard housing function. There is an intimate relationship between this outcome and the paradoxical state of the Indigenous housing and health evidence base, a field which is simultaneously awash with multiple databases providing synoptic information at regional, state/territory, and national levels, yet lacking specificity in relation to the health-enabling status of housing infrastructure.
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