1,720,988 research outputs found

    [Letter from Tim Seelig to Carl Doepel]

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    Letter from Tim Seelig to Carl Doepel dated June 8, 1990, regarding singing lessons for Robert Emery

    [Turtle Creek Chorale Retreat: Tim Seelig and Joe Snyder]

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    Photograph of Tim Seelig (left) and Joe Snyder (right) at a Turtle Creek Chorale retreat in 1990s. They pose next to each other in front of a house's glass doorway. Snyder holds a plastic cup in his right hand and Seelig wraps his arm around Snyder's shoulder. They both wear dark blue shirts and look towards the camera

    [Turtle Creek Chorale Retreat: C. E. Bunkley and Tim Seelig]

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    Photograph of C.E. Bunkley (left) and Tim Seelig at a Turtle Creek Chorale retreat in the 1990s. Seelig dresses in a blonde wig, a black dress covered with silver rhinestones, and wears blue eyeshadow. Seelig reaches towards Bunkley who closes his eyes and smiles. They stand in a dark auditorium

    What are the housing tenure pathways of income support recipients over time?

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    This research discusses the 20 per cent of income support recipients who experience disruption and others changes in housing tenure over time. Most income support recipients have high levels of tenure stability. Less than 20 per cent experience multiple and complex tenure transitions. Changes in tenure over time are driven by a range of factors, with change of income level being only a minor or secondary consideration in many cases. This bulletin is based on research led by Dr Tim Seelig, and involving Dr Jung Hoon Han, Mr Martin O’Flaherty, Dr Michele Haynes, Professor Mark Western, Dr Trisch Short, Associate Professor Scott Baum, and Associate Professor Andrew Jones of the AHURI Queensland Research Centre

    Can tenant incentive schemes improve housing management outcomes? A review of housing management tenant incentive schemes

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    The small scale tenant incentive schemes existing in Australia are perceived by housing managers and tenants to contribute to improvements in service delivery, organisational culture and staff and tenant satisfaction report Keith Jacobs, Tim Seelig, Hazel Easthope and Michele Slatter

    Motivations of investors in the private rental market: positioning paper

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    This is the first report of a study of the motivations of rental investors in Australia. The study aims to gain a better understanding of investors’ experiences, motives and actions, as well as the perceptions of investors’ behaviours among other key players in the rental sector. Tim Seelig, Terry Burke and Alan Morris provide the background to the study, and outline the research themes and questions to be pursued, and the methods employed, based on the original research proposal. The paper also positions the study within specific housing policy, housing market, and housing research contexts

    Reconceptualising housing need in the context of 21st century Australian housing policy

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    This positioning paper is the first output of a study that aims to critically review a range of approaches to conceptualising need in housing and social policy fields in Australia and internationally. The study seeks to provide an analysis of how housing needs in Australian housing might be reconceptualised in light of that review, and what implications this might have for housing policy. The array of issues raised by the notion of needs is complex. What exactly are needs, and how should we think about them? Whose needs are we most concerned about, and why? What sorts of theoretical underpinnings have been developed around whether we ought to respond to certain needs, and how best to make such responses? These are difficult questions which require theoretically informed and ethically focused analysis, as well as practically minded responses. This Positioning Paper provides a critical discussion of the theoretical and conceptual issues surrounding these questions. Written by Tim Seelig, Vivienne Milligan, Peter Phibbs and Alice Thompson&nbsp
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