Understanding the impact of children's housing circumstances in Australia: a data framework
Housing circumstances play an important role in children's lives in ways relevant to policy concerns and amenable to policy intervention, yet the issue is understudied in housing research.
This AHURI unsolicited data project seeks to address this gap by investigating the existing evidence and data by developing a framework for comprehensive data collection and study of children and their homes.
Housing and health
Housing plays a very important role in our health. At the moment we don't have a lot of information about the nature of children's housing in Australia, or the role it plays in their health. This project is an important part of our research looking to fill this gap.
The research team
Dr Amy Clair
Amy Clair is a researcher in the Australian Centre for Housing Research, University of Adelaide, and research associate of the ESRC Centre for Micro-Social Change, University of Essex. A quantitative social policy researcher, her work focuses on the impact of policy on health and well-being, with an emphasis on housing and child well-being. Recent work has explored the impact of cold homes on mental health, the links between housing experiences and biological ageing, and the implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for social policy.
Professor Emma Baker
Emma Baker is Professor of Housing Research at the University of Adelaide where she leads the Healthy Cities Research Group. She is currently leading the construction of a national rental housing conditions dataset and has a track record of successful collaboration with industry, government and non-government organisations. Professor Baker leads the Capturing Complexity research stream.
Associate Professor Lynne Giles
Lynne Giles is an Associate Professor in Biostatistics in the School of Public Health. Her research interests are centred on the application of contemporary statistical techniques to life course data. Most of her research has primarily focussed on the analysis of data from cohort studies. She has been part of the investigator team for the Australian Longitudinal Study of Ageing since 1994. In the past decade, she has developed research interests that address how early life affects health in later childhood and beyond, particularly focussing on growth in infancy and childhood.
Ms Claire Morey
Claire completed her Master of Philosophy in History at the University of Adelaide in 2021. Her area of expertise is domestic violence in nineteenth-century South Australia, with a particular focus on economic abuse and divorce. Claire will assist with research and day-to-day management of the project.