
Overview
Background
Lynda is the Head of School in the School of Social Science and an internationally renowned sociologist. She first studied sociology in the UK where she obtained her Bachelors degree from the University of Wales. After moving to Australia, she completed a PhD in sociology from Central Queensland University before taking up a position at The University of Queensland. From 2011-15 she was an Australian Research Council Future Fellow.
Lynda undertakes research in the areas of community, neighbourhoods and housing. More specifically, she examines how people live and interact in contemporary local communities; how structural and policy processes impact upon those communities and the relationships that play out within them; and the consequences of these changing social dynamics for well-being, feelings of attachment to home and place, conflict, social exclusion and cohesion. She has undertaken her research in a variety of settings including rural areas; remote fly-in, fly-out mining communities; outer-suburban master planned estates; inner-city gentrifying suburbs; low-income neighbourhoods; and new housing developments for older public housing tenants and people with severe and persistent mental health challenges.
Lynda is presently leading a programme of research on ‘un-neighbourliness’ which examines the nature, causes and outcomes of problems between neighbours and their effects on neighbouring more broadly. Funded by an ARC Discovery grant, she and colleagues are exploring how processes of urban change, such as urban consolidation and gentrification influence neighbour relations, and how neighbouring is enacted in different residential contexts. The results of this study have implications for councils trying to respond to rising neighbour complaints; social housing providers managing disputes between tenants; and for urban planning and community resilience policies. She is also an international partner on the ESRCs’ Connected Communities consortium (Crow et al) and the Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research, Data and Methods (WISERDII).
Lynda welcomes inquiries from prospective Honours or Higher Degree Research students who are interested in working with her on any of these, or related, topics.
Courses taught: SOCY2019 Introduction to Social Research
Availability
- Professor Lynda Cheshire is:
- Not available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor, University of Wales
- Bachelor (Honours) of Arts, Central Queensland University
- Doctor of Philosophy, Central Queensland University
Research impacts
Lynda works extensively with government, corporate and community partners to identify and resolve some of the complex challenges they encounter in their lives and/or professional practices, and some of the undesirable (and often unintended) consequences of their policies. Current and completed projects include:
- Community relations in the mining industry
- Discourses of self-help in Australian rural community development policy
- Building sustainable social capital on a master planned estate
- The governmental challenge of private property developers as key actors in building new communities
- Delivering better homes for under-occupying older public housing tenants
- Community resilience and disaster policy and practice
- Sustaining tenancies in the social housing sector for tenants with mental health and other complex issues.
Works
Search Professor Lynda Cheshire’s works on UQ eSpace
2003
Journal Article
Translating policy: Power and action in Australia's country towns
Cheshire, Lynda (2003). Translating policy: Power and action in Australia's country towns. Sociologia Ruralis, 43 (4), 454-473. doi: 10.1046/j.1467-9523.2003.00255.x
2003
Book Chapter
Rural sociology
Lockie, S., Herbert-Cheshire, L. A. and Lawrence, G. A. (2003). Rural sociology. The Cambridge Handbook of Social Sciences in Australia. (pp. 604-625) edited by Ian McAllister, Steve Dowrick and Riaz Hassan. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
2003
Book Chapter
Monto, Queensland
Cheshire, L. A. and Lawrence, G. A. (2003). Monto, Queensland. Community Sustainability in Rural Australia: A Question of Capital?. (pp. 10-37) edited by C. Cocklin and M. Alston. Wagga Wagga: Centre for Rural Res., Charles Sturt Univ.
2003
Other Outputs
Report of the Bowen Basin Communities Residents' Survey: Report to Queensland Government, Department of Premier and Cabinet
Western, M. C., Laffan, W. S., Van Gellecum, Y. R., Haynes, M. A., Cheshire, L. A., Western, J. S., Boreham, P. R. and Brereton, D. J. (2003). Report of the Bowen Basin Communities Residents' Survey: Report to Queensland Government, Department of Premier and Cabinet. St Lucia, Qld, Australia: University of Queensland Social Research Centre.
2002
Conference Publication
Towards sustainability? Resource dependency and development in rural Australia
Herbert-Cheshire, L. A. and Lawrence, G. A. (2002). Towards sustainability? Resource dependency and development in rural Australia. TASA 2002 Conference, Brisbane`, 5-6 July, 2002. Australia: TASA.
2002
Journal Article
Political economy and the challenge of governance
Herbert-Cheshire, L. A. and Lawrence, G. A. (2002). Political economy and the challenge of governance. Journal of Australian Political Economy, 1 (50), 135-145.
2002
Journal Article
The politics of community: Theory and practice
Herbert-Cheshire, L (2002). The politics of community: Theory and practice. Australian Journal of Political Science, 37 (3), 603-604.
2001
Book Chapter
Changing people to change things: building capacity for natural resource management - a governmentality perspective
Cheshire, L. (2001). Changing people to change things: building capacity for natural resource management - a governmentality perspective. Environment, Society and Natural Resource Management: Theoretical Perspectives from Australasia and the Americas. (pp. 270-282) edited by Geoffrey Lawrence, Vaughan Higgins and Stewart Lockie. Cheltenham, United Kingdom: Edward Elgar Publishing.
2000
Journal Article
Contemporary strategies for rural community development in Australia: a governmentality perspective
Herbert-Cheshire, L (2000). Contemporary strategies for rural community development in Australia: a governmentality perspective. Journal of Rural Studies, 16 (2), 203-215. doi: 10.1016/S0743-0167(99)00054-6
Funding
Current funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Lynda Cheshire is:
- Not available for supervision
Supervision history
Current supervision
-
Doctor Philosophy
Community engagement and stakeholder management in building community resilience against natural disasters: the case of Indonesia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Adjunct Professor Adil Khan
-
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding lived experiences and adjustment practices of families of left-behind children in rural Vietnam
Principal Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
Older private renters and evictions in Queensland, Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Zoe Staines
-
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding lived experiences and adjustment practices of families of left-behind children in rural Vietnam
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Maram Shaweesh
-
Doctor Philosophy
Conceptions and experiences of home under residualisation in Brisbane¿s social housing
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Zoe Staines
Completed supervision
-
2020
Doctor Philosophy
Place, disadvantage and the project of the self: pursuing a better life in outer metropolitan Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Patricia Short
-
2018
Doctor Philosophy
Understanding Chinese rural protests through a social movement lens: A study of the Wukan protest
Principal Advisor
-
2017
Doctor Philosophy
Governing customers? Integrating customer focus and compliance in the urban governance context
Principal Advisor
-
2014
Doctor Philosophy
Fair Trade and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) as Middle Class Social Movements in Hong Kong
Principal Advisor
-
2021
Doctor Philosophy
Everyday politics and the negotiations of citizenship in the informal city: An ethnographic account of two informal settlements in Dhaka
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Peter Walters
-
2020
Doctor Philosophy
Determinants of participation in childcare amongst fathers who work very long hours
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Wojtek Tomaszewski
-
2019
Doctor Philosophy
An integrated strategic planning process for developing sustainable master-planned communities and towns
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Sebastien Darchen
-
2016
Doctor Philosophy
Technologies of Choice: The shaping of choice on the World Wide Web
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Paul Henman
-
2015
Doctor Philosophy
Constructing Facebook: Constituting Social Space Online
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Peter Walters
-
2014
Doctor Philosophy
Governing the estates: the deployment of 'community' on public housing estates
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Paul Henman
-
2010
Doctor Philosophy
Regional whole-of-government in Central Queensland: a sociocultural interpretation
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Lawrence
-
2010
Doctor Philosophy
Lakeside living - realising dreams in a master planned community
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Lawrence
-
2008
Doctor Philosophy
Growing old in Springfield Lakes: the possibility of community in a new suburb
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Lawrence
-
2007
Doctor Philosophy
ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE CATTLE GRAZING WITHIN A CULTURE OF PRODUCTIVISM? A SOCIOLOGICAL STUDY OF BROADSCALE BEEF PRODUCTION IN CENTRAL QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Lawrence
-
2007
Doctor Philosophy
REGIONAL PLANNING AS GOOD GOVERNANCE: A CENTRAL QUEENSLAND CASE STUDY
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Emeritus Professor Geoffrey Lawrence
-
2004
Doctor Philosophy
Challenges to the professional ideal: interactions between doctors and bureaucrats in Australia in the closing decade of the twentieth century
Associate Advisor
Media
Enquiries
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