Kate Shaw
#75,123
Most Influential Person Now
Australian academic and activist
Kate Shaw's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Kate Shawlaw Degrees
Law
#2489
World Rank
#3097
Historical Rank
International Law
#1864
World Rank
#2212
Historical Rank
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Political Science Law
Kate Shaw's Degrees
- Masters Human Rights Law University of Melbourne
Why Is Kate Shaw Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Dr. Kate Shaw is an Australian academic, planning activist and commentator, currently serving as a research fellow at the University of Melbourne. Background Kate bad Shaw worked in alternative theatre and arts publicity in Melbourne in the 1980s, before undertaking a post-Graduate Diploma in urban policy and planning and a Masters in urban planning , both at RMIT. She then moved to the University of Melbourne and taught planning law, statutory planning, urban design, and ran classes on political economy, gentrification and the cultures of cities.
Kate Shaw's Published Works
Published Works
- ‘Gentrification Without Displacement' and the Consequent Loss of Place: The Effects of Class Transition on Low-income Residents of Secure Housing in Gentrifying Areas (2015) (201)
- The Unintended Segregation of Transnational Students in Central Melbourne (2009) (139)
- Gentrification: What It Is, Why It Is, and What Can Be Done about It (2008) (107)
- The Place of Alternative Culture and the Politics of its Protection in Berlin, Amsterdam and Melbourne (2005) (89)
- Independent creative subcultures and why they matter (2013) (68)
- Enacting separate social worlds: ‘International’ and ‘local’ students in public space in central Melbourne (2011) (62)
- Docklands Dreamings: Illusions of Sustainability in the Melbourne Docks Redevelopment (2013) (62)
- Place-making or place-masking? The everyday political economy of “making place” (2016) (60)
- What next for the creative city (2014) (46)
- Collection building in ichthyology and herpetology (1998) (39)
- A Response to ‘The Eviction of Critical Perspectives from Gentrification Research’ (2008) (39)
- Place-Making in Megaprojects in Melbourne (2016) (24)
- Where people live (2005) (22)
- Melbourne’s Creative Spaces program: Reclaiming the ‘creative city’ (if not quite the rest of it) (2014) (20)
- Planetary urbanisation: what does it matter for politics or practice? (2015) (20)
- Renew Who? Benefits and Beneficiaries of Renew Newcastle (2015) (19)
- Transnational and temporary: students, community and place-making in central Melbourne (2009) (16)
- Beware the Trojan horse: social mix constructions in Melbourne (2011) (15)
- Commentary: Is There Hope for Policy? (2008) (13)
- University students and the ‘creative city’ (2010) (12)
- Inner-City Renaissance: The Changing Face, Functions and Structure of Brisbane's Inner-City (2000) (11)
- Discretion vs. regulation and the sorry case of Melbourne city plan 2010 (2003) (11)
- The Trouble with the Creative Class (2006) (7)
- Recognising tertiary students in place-making for urban spaces (2007) (5)
- A Reexamination of the Phylogenetic Relationships of the Sand Darters (Teleostei: Percidae) (1999) (5)
- The Melbourne indie music scene and the inner city blues (2009) (5)
- The intelligent woman's guide to the urban question (2015) (4)
- Public housing estate redevelopments in Australian inner cities and the role of social mix (2013) (4)
- Dueling Canons (2019) (2)
- Social mix and the City: Challenging the Mixed Communities Consensus in Housing and Urban Planning Policies (2013) (2)
- Teaching and Learning Guide for: Gentrification: What It Is, Why It Is, and What Can Be Done About It (2010) (2)
- Australia's Unintended Cities: The Impact of Housing on Urban Redevelopment (2013) (1)
- Public Housing Estate Redevelopments in Australian Inner Cities and the Meanings of Social Mix (2013) (1)
- “Her bun in my oven”: Motivations and experiences of two‐mother families who have used reciprocal IVF (2022) (1)
- Karl Beitel 2013: Local Protest, Global Movements — Capital, Community, and State in San Francisco. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. (2014) (1)
- Transnational and temporary: place-making, students and community in central Melbourne (2006) (1)
- Book review: Lees, L., editor 2004: The emancipatory city? Paradoxes and possibilities. London: Sage. xii + 243 pp. £74 cloth, £23.99 paper. ISBN: 978 0 7619 7386 7 cloth, 978 0 7619 7387 4 paper (2008) (0)
- High rise Melbourne (2013) (0)
- Ongoing Genocides and the Need for Healing: The Cases of Native and African Americans (2021) (0)
- Evaluation of the Kensington public housing redevelopment and place management model (2012) (0)
- An analysis of morphological variation within and between stream populations of Gasterosteus aculeatus Linnaeus (1985) (0)
- Book Reviews (2011) (0)
- ‘Don't Try This at Home’ (2005) (0)
- Notes on Contributors (2005) (0)
- Council Recommendation for Promoting Cooperation and Solidarity Amongst the Member States: A Far Enough Step? (2021) (0)
- Strolling through the SMERPs: 6 New Social Media Terms You Must Know (2009) (0)
- Brexit budget or business as usual? Unpicking the 2016 Autumn statement (2016) (0)
- Looking at Shakespeare: A Visual History of Twentieth-Century Performance. By Dennis Kennedy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993. Pp. xxiv + 358 + illus. £45; $69.95. (1994) (0)
- Kate Shaw (University of Melbourne) On Kirsteen Paton's Gentrification: A Working-Class Perspective, Antipode (2015) (0)
- 21st century urban renewal: rethinking Australian planning and building regulations and their effects on the life of the city (2013) (0)
- Comprehensive Guide to Location-Based Social Media (2010) (0)
- Intergenerational fairness in post-crisis Europe : A comparative study (2019) (0)
- Will Labour’s ‘six tests’ hold the government to account on the UK’s Brexit deal? (2017) (0)
- Let's talk about inclusionary zoning (again) (2017) (0)
- Narrating boom and bust: the life-cycle of ideas and narrative in New Labour’s political economy, 1997-2010 (2018) (0)
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Kate Shaw is affiliated with the following schools: