The role of socio-demographic and spatial characteristics in Work from Home in Australia
BCARR conducted a Work from Home (WfH) research project to provide evidence of how social, demographic and spatial characteristics influence WfH capability and uptake in Australian cities. The study also explores the link between WfH and relocation and investigates post-pandemic prospects for WfH in Australia. This new evidence can help improve understanding of the key drivers of WfH and the ongoing role that WfH will likely play in influencing urban and regional development outcomes in Australia.
This research uses data from an earlier study conducted by the University of South Australia between September 2020 and June 2021, that was co-funded by our department in partnership with the iMOVE Co-operative Research Centre.
Read the iMOVE report on post-pandemic work-from-home trends (March 2022).
iMOVE report—Encouraging-continuation-of-work-from-home-post-pandemic—March 2022