Vision

How can we help to strengthen environmental stewardship, economic prosperity, cultural vibrancy, and social justice for this new global age?

We have entered a challenging new era, in which old ways of seeing and acting no longer seem to apply. Climate change, pandemics, economics, information, voter influence… these are all truly global issues. More than ever, shared knowledge, values, social norms, leadership, action, and policy are needed across all levels and sectors of our global society.

"Above all we need a politics of respect for knowledge" (Prof Jeffrey Sachs)

Iain strives to help build healthy, liveable communities. His vision is for cities and communities that are:

“… constantly creating and improving those physical and social environments and expanding those community resources which enable people to mutually support each other in performing all the functions of life and in developing their maximum potential”

(WHO Healthy Cities co-founders, Prof Trevor Hancock & Prof Leonard Duhl)

A ‘healthy community’:

US Coalition for Healthier Cities and Communities (1999). Based on consultations with 1200 community initiatives

Healthy communities are Liveable

At their core, Healthy communities have a Vision to be Liveable. ‘Liveable’ communities are:

safe, attractive, socially cohesive and inclusive, and environmentally sustainable; with affordable and diverse housing linked by convenient public transport, walking and cycling infrastructure to employment, education, public open space, local shops, health and community services, and leisure and cultural opportunities (Lowe et al., 2013).

Iain helped to develop this definition of Liveability, which has informed Plan Melbourne and is included in the Victorian Public Health and Wellbeing Plan. It has also informed a range of local government strategies. This includes Cardinia Shire Council’s Liveability Plan 2017-29 and the City of Greater Shepparton’s Public Health Strategic Plan 2018 – 2028. In 2016, this work informed a special edition of the Lancet on urban design, transport and health, which was launched at the UN 71st General Assembly in New York.

Level 3 Offering

Consultancy (fee for services)

• Adult education and training
programs – development,
delivery and evaluation
• Evaluation
• Group development
• Group facilitation
• Indicator development
• Knowledge translation
• Municipal public health planning
• Organisational review,
development and change
• Partnership development
• Policy analysis
• Research
• Strategic planning
• University-government community partnerships
• Workforce development

Interested?

Level 2 Offering

Subscription services

• Advice
• Research methods
• How to do action research
• Evaluation
• Adult education and training
• University-government-community partnerships
• Liveability research – how to use it.
• Brokering partnerships
• WHO Healthy Cities
• Group development
• Strategic planning
• Knowledge translation
• Indicator development
• Advocacy development and training
• Coaching
• Mentoring
• Practice review
• Professional
supervision
• Troubleshooting

Interested?

Level 1 Offering

free articles and clips on topical issues

• Adult learning
• Advocacy
• Collective impact
• Community capacity
• Community engagement
• Community organising
• Empowerment
• Governance
• Healthy cities – healthy urban planning
• Indicator development
• Interviews with interesting people
• Knowledge translation
• Liveability
• Municipal public health and wellbeing planning
• Nature and health
• Participatory action research
• Population health
• Psychological conceptions of place (place attachment,
identity, belonging, dependency, etc)
• Psychological sense of community
• Reporting back on recent events held or attended
• Self-help / social support groups
• Social capital
• Social entrepreneurship
• Strategic planning
• The forces that drive us – (nature nurture, destiny)
• The importance of history and oral tradition
• The role of local government
• UN Sustainable Development Goals
• University-community engagement

Interested?