Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia

This paper begins by reviewing the existing international literature on the links between housing and child development. The housing environment can significantly improve or hinder a child’s physical, social, emotional, behavioural and cognitive development directly and via its impacts on the child’...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dockery, Alfred Michael, Kendall, G, Li, Jianghong, Mahendran, Anusha, Ong, Rachel
Other Authors: J Dixon
Format: Conference Paper
Published: University of Auckland 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19950
_version_ 1848750173732208640
author Dockery, Alfred Michael
Kendall, G
Li, Jianghong
Mahendran, Anusha
Ong, Rachel
author2 J Dixon
author_facet J Dixon
Dockery, Alfred Michael
Kendall, G
Li, Jianghong
Mahendran, Anusha
Ong, Rachel
author_sort Dockery, Alfred Michael
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper begins by reviewing the existing international literature on the links between housing and child development. The housing environment can significantly improve or hinder a child’s physical, social, emotional, behavioural and cognitive development directly and via its impacts on the child’s parenting methods. The review of international literature is drawn from a range of disciplines including sociology, epidemiology, economics, housing policy, social welfare, health, medicine, child development and psychology. It highlights key dimensions of children’s housing circumstances that are associated with their health and development. These include housing tenure, neighbourhood conditions, housing affordability, homelessness, frequency of residential moves, extent of crowding, housing disrepair, environmental allergens and toxicants used in the home. The paper also raises some important conceptual and methodological issues that need to be addressed in examining the causal pathways through which housing factors influence child developmental outcomes. In particular, there is a need to isolate housing factors from confounding influences such as parental socio-economic status and identify mediating factors such as parenting behaviour, and the inter-relationships between different housing factors that need to be accounted for.There is currently a dearth of empirical studies that analyse the links between housing and child development in Australia, despite the plethora of studies examining these links in other developed countries such as the United States and United Kingdom. Hence, the third part of this paper utilises officially published statistics and the limited pool of Australian studies to highlight key policy issues requiring urgent empirical research in Australia in the near future. These issues include the disparity in housing conditions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children, the impact of homelessness on children and measuring the impacts of housing affordability stress on child development.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:32:38Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-19950
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:32:38Z
publishDate 2011
publisher University of Auckland
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-199502023-01-27T05:26:31Z Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia Dockery, Alfred Michael Kendall, G Li, Jianghong Mahendran, Anusha Ong, Rachel J Dixon A Dupuis P. Lysnar Wellbeing Housing Child Development This paper begins by reviewing the existing international literature on the links between housing and child development. The housing environment can significantly improve or hinder a child’s physical, social, emotional, behavioural and cognitive development directly and via its impacts on the child’s parenting methods. The review of international literature is drawn from a range of disciplines including sociology, epidemiology, economics, housing policy, social welfare, health, medicine, child development and psychology. It highlights key dimensions of children’s housing circumstances that are associated with their health and development. These include housing tenure, neighbourhood conditions, housing affordability, homelessness, frequency of residential moves, extent of crowding, housing disrepair, environmental allergens and toxicants used in the home. The paper also raises some important conceptual and methodological issues that need to be addressed in examining the causal pathways through which housing factors influence child developmental outcomes. In particular, there is a need to isolate housing factors from confounding influences such as parental socio-economic status and identify mediating factors such as parenting behaviour, and the inter-relationships between different housing factors that need to be accounted for.There is currently a dearth of empirical studies that analyse the links between housing and child development in Australia, despite the plethora of studies examining these links in other developed countries such as the United States and United Kingdom. Hence, the third part of this paper utilises officially published statistics and the limited pool of Australian studies to highlight key policy issues requiring urgent empirical research in Australia in the near future. These issues include the disparity in housing conditions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children, the impact of homelessness on children and measuring the impacts of housing affordability stress on child development. 2011 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19950 University of Auckland fulltext
spellingShingle Wellbeing
Housing
Child Development
Dockery, Alfred Michael
Kendall, G
Li, Jianghong
Mahendran, Anusha
Ong, Rachel
Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia
title Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia
title_full Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia
title_fullStr Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia
title_full_unstemmed Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia
title_short Housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in Australia
title_sort housing and child development: key dimensions, knowledge gaps and issues for future research in australia
topic Wellbeing
Housing
Child Development
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19950