Australian Heartlands: Making space for hope in the suburbs
By (Author) Brendan Gleeson
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st May 2006
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Urban and municipal planning and policy
Educational: Citizenship and social education
City and town planning: architectural aspects
307.76
Winner of Inaugural Iremonger Award for Writing on Public Issues 2004 (Australia)
Paperback
224
Width 140mm, Height 208mm
310g
Australia is one of the world's most urbanised nations, belying our image as a country of hard-living outback heroes and laid back sea-changers. Our future welfare is closely tied to the wellbeing of our cities and even more importantly, our suburbs. In this powerful account of the political, social, economic and environmental trends shaping Australia, Brendan Gleeson argues forcefully for the reinstatement of the city as Australia's 'national heartland'.
Australian Heartlands is a provocative examination of the health of our urban communities and their role in national life. It ranges across topics such as gated communities and the new suburban poverty sinkholes, the lost of the public domain, the experience of childhood in contemporary suburbs, environmental degradation and the challenges of migration. If you care about Australia's future, this is a book you must read.
Brendan Gleeson is Professor of Urban Policy at Griffith University and a leading commentator on urban Australia. He has authored, co-authored or co-edited seven books and has written numerous opinion pieces for the Sydney Morning Herald, the Courier Mail and the Canberra Times. He lives in the Brisbane suburbs with his partner and their two children.