The experience of international students before and during COVID-19: housing, work, study and wellbeing

Alan Morris, Catherine Hastings, Emma Mitchell, Gaby Ramia, Shaun Wilson, Charlotte Overgaard

    Research output: Book/ReportOther report

    Abstract

    International students’ experience of renting accommodation in Australia is a crucial but overlooked determinant of their wellbeing, which has been brought into stark relief by the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. This report is based on two surveys of international students in the private rental sector (PRS). The first survey was conducted in the second half of 2019, before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the second survey in June and the first week of July 2020, during the pandemic. The findings of the first survey show that a substantial proportion of international students were already in a precarious situation before the pandemic. The second survey reveals the various impacts of the pandemic on international students in the private rental sector and the extent to which their circumstances have deteriorated.

    The report also draws on data from the initial stage of the qualitative component of the study - semi-structured in-depth interviews with international students conducted between April and July 2020. Quotes from some of the 26 semi-structured interviews conducted thus far, are presented alongside the survey data evidence that follows.

    Although the focus is on the experiences of private renting, the report has taken a broader sociological approach to student housing problems and, as such, it offers wider insights into the wellbeing, employment, and income situations of international students at a crucial turning point for the Australian higher education sector.
    Original languageEnglish
    PublisherUniversity of Technology Sydney
    Number of pages131
    ISBN (Electronic)9780648905509
    Publication statusPublished - 12 Jul 2020

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