ABSTRACT
New legislation was introduced in 2018 in Victoria, Australia to encourage the negotiation of affordable housing agreements. This change resulted in the expansion of formal and informal mechanisms for cross-sectoral affordable housing delivery. In this paper we draw on 20 interviews with housing stakeholders, focusing on the process of negotiation. We propose a novel theoretical framework to interpret capacity for collective action in a loosely regulated policy area, combining insights from negotiation theory and Institutional Capacity Development (ICD) literature. We find widespread concerns about the opaque, inefficient and potentially exploitative nature of outcomes. We also find that agreements varied across projects based on levels of trust; access to information; political capital; capacity for mutual gain; and the presence of shared rules for interacting. We conclude that competition-based negotiations may lead to increased institutional capacity while also highlighting the challenges of housing delivery in the context of institutional uncertainty.
Disclosure Statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1. A Section 173 agreement is a legal contract between the responsible authority (usually a local council) and a land owner that sets out conditions or restrictions on the use or development of land. It is most commonly used in Victoria to secure open space or preserve heritage features.
2. Deliberative development is a term used to describe non-speculative development models, similar to baugruppen.