2019 Other Outputs Representation, remembrance and the memorialAndrew, Brook, Neath, Jessica, Marino, Corina, Gilbert, Jock, Phillips, Christine and Go-Sam, Carroll (2019). Representation, remembrance and the memorial. Landscape Architecture Australia (161), 34-38. |
2019 Conference Publication Safe and Healthy Drinking Water in Indigenous Local Government Areas Program: Service Delivery Model Prerequisites for SuccessMilligan, B., Blake, C., Hall, N.L., Selvey, L., Grodecki, H., Jackson, G., Go-Sam, C. and Veronese, T. (2019). Safe and Healthy Drinking Water in Indigenous Local Government Areas Program: Service Delivery Model Prerequisites for Success. QWater Conference, Brisbane, Australia, 20 November 2019. |
2018 Journal Article Do Yugambeh-Bundjalung cultural landscapes matter?Go-Sam, Carroll (2018). Do Yugambeh-Bundjalung cultural landscapes matter?. Architecture Australia, 107 (1), 51-53. |
2018 Other Outputs Gaps in Indigenous RepairGo-Sam, Carroll (2018). Gaps in Indigenous Repair. Repair: Australian Pavilion 2018. (pp. 64-73) edited by Mauro Baracco and Louise Wright. New York, United States: Actar Publishers. |
2018 Book Chapter Mobilising Indigenous agency through cultural sustainability in architecture: are we there yet?Go-Sam, Carroll and Keys, Catherine (2018). Mobilising Indigenous agency through cultural sustainability in architecture: are we there yet?. The handbook of contemporary indigenous architecture. (pp. 347-380) edited by Elizabeth Grant, Kelly Greenop, Albert L. Refiti and Daniel J. Glenn. Singapore: Springer Nature. doi: 10.1007/978-981-10-6904-8_14 |
2016 Journal Article Remote Indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a mapGo-Sam, Carroll and Memmott, Paul (2016). Remote Indigenous settlements - more than tiny dots on a map. Architecture Australia, 105 (5), 53-54. |
2016 Journal Article Shifting Australian Indigenous SettlementsMemmott, Paul and Go-Sam, Carroll (2016). Shifting Australian Indigenous Settlements. Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Working Paper Series, 278, 1-23. |
2014 Conference Publication Assimilating problems: from humpies to traditional housesGo-Sam, Carroll (2014). Assimilating problems: from humpies to traditional houses. Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand (SAHANZ) Annual Conference, Auckland, New Zealand, 2-5 July 2014. Gold Coast, QLD, Australia: SAHANZ. |
2013 Other Outputs Housing conditionality, Indigenous lifeworlds and policy outcomes: towards a model for culturally responsive housing provisionHabibis, Daphne, Memmott, Paul, Phillips, Rhonda, Go-Sam, Carroll, Keys, Cathy and Moran, Mark (2013). Housing conditionality, Indigenous lifeworlds and policy outcomes: towards a model for culturally responsive housing provision. Melbourne, Australia: Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute. |
2012 Other Outputs Resisting BrisbaneGo-Sam, Carroll (2012). Resisting Brisbane. Brisbane, Australia: Finding Country project. |
2012 Other Outputs Building new housing in remote Indigenous communitiesDavidson, James, Go Sam, Carroll, Memmott, Paul and Grant, Elizabeth (2012). Building new housing in remote Indigenous communities. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: AHURI (Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute). |
2012 Book Chapter NATSISS crowding data: what does it assume and how can we challenge the orthodoxy?Memmott, Paul, Greenop, Kelly, Clarke, Andrew, Go-Sam, Carroll, Birdsall-Jones, Christina, Harvey-Jones, William, Corunna, Vanessa and Western, Mark (2012). NATSISS crowding data: what does it assume and how can we challenge the orthodoxy?. Survey Analysis for Indigenous Policy in Australia: Social Science Perspectives. (pp. 241-279) edited by Boyd Hunter and Nicholas Biddle. Canberra, Australia: ANU E Press. |
2011 Journal Article Modelling crowding in Aboriginal AustraliaMemmott, Paul, Birdsall-Jones, Christina, Go-Sam, Carroll, Greenop, Kelly and Corunna, Vanessa (2011). Modelling crowding in Aboriginal Australia. AHURI Positioning Paper, i-52. |
2011 Journal Article Remote Indigenous housing procurement: A comparative studyDavidson, James, Memmott, Paul,, Go-Sam, Carroll and Grant, Elizabeth (2011). Remote Indigenous housing procurement: A comparative study. AHURI Final Report (167), i-144. |
2011 Conference Publication Fabricating Blackness: Aboriginal identity constructs in the production and authorisation of architectureGo-Sam, Carroll (2011). Fabricating Blackness: Aboriginal identity constructs in the production and authorisation of architecture. Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand (SAHANZ) Annual Conference, Brisbane, QLD, Australia, 7-10 July 2011. Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand (SAHANZ). |
2010 Journal Article Sep Yama: “Ground you cannot see” Finding Country (a primer) (exhibition review)Go-Sam, Carroll (2010). Sep Yama: “Ground you cannot see” Finding Country (a primer) (exhibition review). Interstices: Journal of Architecture and Related Arts, 11, 154-159. |
2010 Journal Article Remote Indigenous housing procurement and post-occupancy outcomes: A comparative studyDavidson, James, Go-Sam, Carroll and Memmott, Paul (2010). Remote Indigenous housing procurement and post-occupancy outcomes: A comparative study. AHURI Positioning Paper, 129, 1-74. |
2008 Journal Article Working with and against Indigenous design paradigmsCarroll Go-sam (2008). Working with and against Indigenous design paradigms. Architecture Australia, 97 (5), 53-58. |
2008 Conference Publication 'Lest We Forget': Working with and against Indigenous Design ParadigmsGo-Sam, Carroll (2008). 'Lest We Forget': Working with and against Indigenous Design Paradigms. RAIA Indigenous Housing Conference, Alice Springs, N.T., Australia, 26-27 Oct 2007. Victoria, Australia: Royal Australian Institute of Architects. |
2007 Book Chapter Spinifex houses of the Western DesertMemmott, Paul C. and Go-Sam, Carroll (2007). Spinifex houses of the Western Desert. Gunyah, goondie & wurley: The Aboriginal architecture of Australia. (pp. 208-231) edited by Paul C. Memmott. St Lucia, Queensland, Australia: University of Qld Press. |