108 Moore Street

Liverpool, NSW 2170

Level 2
178 Queen Street

Campbelltown, NSW 2560

info@wsmrc.org.au

Email us

referrals@wsmrc.org.au

Refer a client

02 8778 1200

Monday: 9-5pm
Tuesday: 9-5pm
Wednesday: 9-5pm
Thursday: 9-1pm
Friday: 9-5pm

Circles of Sustainability

Share This Post

The Western Sydney MRC and the Institute of Culture & Society (Western Sydney University) are conducting a study of this place of ours, where we want to hear and understand differing and overlapping perspectives of people who live and/or have lives in the Liverpool LGA.

Why

Liverpool is on the cusp of many changes. Some have come to pass or else still in full swing, some loom on the horizon, and others no doubt will leap out unexpectedly. And then there are those enduring things that make Liverpool, ‘Liverpool’!

We are interested in the question of urban sustainability, resilience, and adaptation because “cities have become the unlikely but crucial zones for the survival of humanity,” says Dr Paul James (Professor of Globalisation & Cultural Diversity, ICS/WSU). So, our interest in this question is simply because “we need to”, in order to survive and thrive in our ‘habitat’, both as individuals and families on the one hand, and as organisations and a community, on the other. We are sure you share this perspective, too.

How

The method we will apply is the Circles of Social Life approach originally developed by the UN Global Compact Cities Program and Metropolis. As such it aims to capture and measure subjective and “ground-up” responses to sustainability across four key domains: Economics, Ecology, Politics, and Culture. The leading thinker(s) of this approach, Professor Paul James and his team, will be co-convening / conducting the project.

Part 1 – Critical Reference Group

http://www.circlesofsustainability.org/projects/settlement-and-disability/

About Western Sydney MRC

About Western Sydney MRC Western Sydney MRC is a not-for-profit organisation and community advocate supporting newly-arrived individuals and diverse emerging and established communities to settle in Australia. We work with people who experience vulnerability, including individuals from a refugee background, those seeking asylum and culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities, assisting in building capacity to live empowered, informed and connected lives.

Media Enquiries

Media enquiries can be directed to:
Rachel Haywood,
Marketing and Communications Manager,
Contact 0456 222 080
Email: rachel@wsmrc.org.au

More To Explore

Childcare Subsidy A Significant Leap in Overcoming Work Barriers for CALD Women
Financial

Childcare Subsidy: A Significant Leap in Overcoming Work Barriers for CALD Women

Childcare subsidies hold immense potential in empowering culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) women, enabling them to overcome work barriers and achieve better settlement outcomes. With a focus on affordability, these subsidies make quality early childhood education and care accessible, paving the way for increased workforce participation and community engagement.

Translate »