<p>Schools as Community Hubs are recognised for their significant
contribution to communities. Yet these projects must negotiate complex
policy relationships, across disciplines and various government
jurisdictions to achieve stakeholder and community support, funding, and
delivery for long-term integrated benefits. Policy research in this
area has been scarce. This study – in the early phase of a PhD –
researches policy relationships for schools as community hubs through an
interpretative analysis lens of both Bacchi’s ‘What’s the Problem
Represented to be?’ (Bacchi, 1999), focussing on policy
‘problematisation(s)’, and that of performative and locally enacted
policy (Ball et al., 2012). This framework is applied to an
interpretative policy narrative of Yuille Park (Prep to Year 8)
Community College, in central Victoria, Australia. Now proclaimed as a
‘whole of life’ community centre (DET, 2020), Yuille Park relied on the
skill and continuity of key actors who gave – with little formal policy
direction – coordinated solutions across service provision, urban
planning and facility design that has made a difference to a struggling
community, generating neighbourhood uplift and helping to overcome
entrenched intergenerational challenges.</p>