More than a roof : how can community development help public housing contribute to wellbeing? : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Public Health, SHORE and Whariki Research Centre at Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand

dc.confidentialEmbargo : No
dc.contributor.advisorGallen, Karen
dc.contributor.authorGallen, Rosie
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-12T23:47:44Z
dc.date.available2025-10-12T23:47:44Z
dc.date.issued2025-10-13
dc.description.abstractKo ngā kāinga me ngā hapori e noho nei mātau te tūāpapa o te oranga The homes and communities we live in are the foundation of our wellbeing. This thesis explores how community development can enhance the contribution of public housing to resident and community wellbeing in Aotearoa New Zealand. Drawing on qualitative interviews with practitioners and housing professionals across central and local government, the study examines how community development is conceptualised, enacted, and constrained within public housing contexts. Set against a backdrop of institutional transformation—particularly the establishment of Kāinga Ora–Homes and Communities—the research adopts a social constructionist approach to interrogate how trust, care, participation, and organisational culture shape both the practice and potential of community development. Findings reveal that practitioners serve as relational infrastructure: sustaining trust, cultural presence, and collective agency within systems marked by residualisation, policy volatility, and managerial logics. While community development is consistently affirmed at a strategic level, it remains structurally marginalised—underfunded, culturally undervalued, and reliant on the discretionary labour of Māori, Pacific, and women practitioners who bear the emotional and ethical burdens of institutional ambiguity. Despite these constraints, practitioners actively create space for voice, connection, and inclusion—revealing the quiet architecture that holds public housing systems together. Their work is not formally mandated but enacted through presence, care, and cultural fluency. This thesis introduces three conceptual lenses—Creating and Holding Space, The Practitioner as Relational Infrastructure, and Reframing Care as Duty—to propose a grounded model of relational governance. This framework reconceptualises care, trust, and participation not as discretionary virtues, but as core institutional responsibilities. By integrating Indigenous and Pacific relational ontologies with Western theories of care, governance, and participation, the research contributes to an emerging paradigm of public service rooted in equity, accountability, and relational practice. Ultimately, the thesis argues that making public housing more than a roof requires investing not just in buildings, but in people, relationships, and the institutional conditions that allow communities to flourish.
dc.identifier.urihttps://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/73679
dc.publisherMassey University
dc.rights© The Author
dc.subjectcommunity development, public housing, housing renewal, social capital, care, participation, capacity-building, public service, wellbeing
dc.subject.anzsrc440707 Housing policy
dc.subject.anzsrc330405 Public participation and community engagement
dc.titleMore than a roof : how can community development help public housing contribute to wellbeing? : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Public Health, SHORE and Whariki Research Centre at Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand
thesis.degree.disciplinePublic Health
thesis.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.).
thesis.description.doctoral-citation-abridgedRosie Gallen explored how community development strengthens wellbeing in Aotearoa New Zealand’s public housing system. She found that practitioners build trust and belonging within complex organisations. Her research shows that housing becomes “more than a roof” when care, connection, and community voice are recognised as core public responsibilities.
thesis.description.doctoral-citation-longRosie Gallen examined how community development can strengthen wellbeing and belonging in Aotearoa New Zealand’s public housing system. Through interviews with practitioners, housing staff, and senior managers, she explored how trust, care, and participation are built and sustained within large public organisations. Her research found that practitioners play a vital relational role, often holding communities together despite structural and policy pressures. By integrating Indigenous and Pacific perspectives with theories of care and governance, her thesis reframes care and trust as institutional responsibilities—showing that public housing becomes “more than a roof” when relationships and community voice are valued.
thesis.description.name-pronounciationRO SEE GAL LEN

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
GallenPhDThesis.pdf
Size:
3.51 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
GallenPhDThesis.pdf