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Four ways we can clean up corruption in land rezoning in Queensland

In an article in The Conversation (4.6.15) Paul Frijters and Cameron Murray report on their research into land rezoning in Queensland:

‘One routine governance decision prone to corruption is the zoning of our cities. Land zoning rules supposedly ensure complementary uses are co-located while conflicting uses are not. For instance, zoning ensures chemical plants are not built next to schools and electricity grids are planned for areas with future population pockets.’

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