Policy and strategy
results found
The collaboration solution? Factors for collaborative success
‘It is not a biography…’ it is executive practice
Australia: building policy capacity for managing wicked policy problems
Research and its policy influence
Urban water governance in times of multiple stressors: an editorial
Exploring institutional adaptive capacity in practice: examining water governance adaptation in Australia
Understanding management and modelling of urban hydrology and its consequences for receiving waters; a state of the art.
Organizational culture and the paradox of performance management
Book Chapter: Politics and Government
Regulatory performance of audit tournaments and compliance observability
Promoting cooperation in nonlinear social dilemmas through peer punishment
Swords without covenants do not lead to self-governance
WA groundwater replenishment trial – a case study of creating the enabling environment for regulatory change
‘Next Practice’ Governance for Water Sensitive Cities
Liveability and the Water Sensitive City
Better policy key to water sensitive urban design
Fitzgibbon Chase: A case study in technological innovation, regulation and planning policy connections
CRCWSC Industry Note (2014): Valuing stormwater management: Who is willing to pay?
There are many characteristics that impact a person’s willingness to pay for public goods. Willingness to pay for environmental services, such as stormwater quality improvement or cooler temperatures in suburbs, varies significantly across households with different incomes. Insights on community preference and the value placed on various environmental strategies are helping to inform decisions on project
investment and policy design.