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Qarc funding
Qarc funding







This project aims to investigate the role of professions in rebuilding trust in residential building construction in Australia. Total funding: $238,210 Linkage Projects administered by other institutionsĬonstructing Building Integrity: Raising standards through professionalism Partner organisations: Your Side Australia Western Sydney MRC Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre Gallery Lane Cove + Creative Studios In partnership with community and industry, this project will inform future AI developments and policy increasing its adaptability, accessibility and affordability. Yet, AI is now central to socio-economic well-being and inclusion. Evidence to date documents the continual exclusionary impact of artificial intelligence (AI) behind such technologies in addition to its inaccessibility to complex end-users. CaLD persons with disability significantly rely on digital information systems, devices and platforms to secure their economic, social and cultural inclusion. Over 1 million disabled Australians are from culturally and linguistically diverse (CaLD) communities, the majority of whom are ineligible for disability and multicultural services. School of Social Sciences Institute for Culture and Society School of Humanities and Communication ArtsĮnabling Disability? Autonomous Technologies and CaLD persons with disabilityĪ/Prof Karen Soldatic (Western) Dr Liam Magee (Western) A/Prof Shanthi Robertson (Western) Prof Paul James (Western) Ms Snow Li (Your Side Australia) Ms Meredith Stuebe (Western Sydney MRC) Mrs Dianne McClaughlin (Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre) Dr Lida Ghahremanlou (Microsoft Corporation) Ms Rachael Kiang (Gallery Lane Cove + Creative Studios) Total funding: $524,027 Associate Professor Karen Soldatic, Dr Liam Magee, Associate Professor Shanthi Robertson and Professor Paul James Partner organisations: NSW Rural Fire Service Office of Environment and Heritage NSW Environment, Planning and Sustainable Development Directorate These forecasts will also facilitate improved planning of prescribed burns: if fuels are too dry there is a risk of burns escaping, conversely, if fuels are too wet there is a risk that burns will fail to meet objectives. Forecasts of live fuel moisture content will deliver an early warning system of the risk of bushfires. This will be achieved by combining (i) satellite-derived estimates of live fuel moisture content, (ii) forecasts of soil moisture, and (iii) plant physiological responses to soil dryness. the foliage and fine branches of shrubs and trees). This research aims to develop, for the first time, a model to reliably forecast the moisture content of live fuels (e.g. Total funding: $162,178 Dr Rachael Nolan, Associate Professor Brendan Choat, Distinguished Professor Belinda Medlyn and Associate Professor Matthias Boerįorecasting live fuel moisture content, the on/off switch for forest fireĭr Rachel Nolan (Western) A/Prof Brendan Choat (Western) Dist Prof Belinda Medlyn (Western) A/Prof Matthias Boer (Western) Dr Marta Yebra (ANU) A/Prof Victor Resco de Dios (University of Lleida) Prof Albert van Dijk (ANU) Dr Luigi Renzullo (ANU)ĭry forest fuels are a precursor of large bushfires. Partner organisation: Australian Cooperative Housing Alliance

qarc funding

The project outcome will be an evidence base of what works in cooperative housing, which can benefit the country by providing a rationale for growth of and policy support for socially beneficial housing. However, evidence for those benefits has gaps, so this study aims to develop a framework for assessing housing cooperative benefits and to develop a typology to identify the factors shaping those benefits. They are associated with benefits for member-residents, including improved housing, improved senses of belonging and community, and employment and education outcomes. Housing cooperatives are member-based organisations providing rental and owner-occupied homes to members. Articulating value in housing cooperativesĪ/Prof Louise Crabtree (Western) Dr Neil Perry (Western) Dr Sidsel Grimstad (The University of Newcastle) A/Prof Wendy Stone (Swinburne University of Technology) Dr Emma Power (Western)Īustralia has a persistent shortage of affordable, quality housing.









Qarc funding