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Sea Change: Re-Inventing Rural and Regional Australia

Abstract

The ABC’s popular SeaChange series has re-popularised the idyll of getting away from big city pressures to high amenity rural and small town settings on the Australian coastline and in select inland localities usually within striking distance of the big cities. This paper addresses: the changing relationships between city and hinterland that enable, or drive, such choices; the reasons why people choose to move; the different types of places in which they settle; and the implications for these places, the settlers and existing residents. Movements from city to country have been going on for a long time, 30 years in their contemporary manifestations in Australia and in other western industrialised nations. Whilst the factors involved are constant, there are significant recent shifts to the balance of forces that make the most recent period, and the scenario for the future, distinctive and worthy of continued attention by researchers and policy makers. Drawing on a long-term research engagement with the subject, the paper is based on a recent public lecture given by the author at the State Library of New South Wales.

Keywords

Sea change, population turnaround, counterurbanisation, perimetropolitan development, exurban development, regional development, amenity migration, welfare migration

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Author Biography

Peter Murphy

Peter Murphy is a Professor in the Planning and Urban Development Program at the University of New South Wales (p.murphy@unsw.edu.au). He has been studying development in non-metropolitan
amenity regions since the 1970s when he completed his PhD on second homes and
retirement migration. He and Ian Burnley, a long-term collaborator, have a book on
the sea change phenomenon due out late 2002 (The Great Change: Movement from
Metropolitan to Arcadian Australia. UNSW Press).