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Daniel Reeders

Researcher at Australian National University

Publications -  21
Citations -  339

Daniel Reeders is an academic researcher from Australian National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: National Disability Insurance Scheme & Service provider. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 20 publications receiving 237 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Reeders include La Trobe University & University of New South Wales.

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Redressing or entrenching social and health inequities through policy implementation? Examining personalised budgets through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme.

TL;DR: The research concluded that ‘personalisation’ approaches can widen inequities and inequalities unless careful consideration is given at both policy design and implementation stages.
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The personalisation agenda: the case of the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme

TL;DR: In 2013, Australia launched a major disability scheme aiming to give participants greater choice and control over services as mentioned in this paper, which is based on the international trend towards personalisation, as part of the International Journal of Distributed Sensor Networks.
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The Vexed Question of Market Stewardship in the Public Sector: Examining Equity and the Social Contract through the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme

TL;DR: The authors argue that to fulfil the social contract between government and citizens, governments need to ensure that markets are properly stewarded and embedded in broader social safety nets This, they contend, can ensure citizens receive the gains of market models while being protected from market failures or market-produced inequities.
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Investigating combination HIV prevention: isolated interventions or complex system

TL;DR: Treatment as prevention has mobilized new opportunities in preventing HIV transmission and has led to bold new UNAIDS targets in testing, treatment coverage and transmission reduction, but is this investment leading to a deeper understanding of how to combine interventions?
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Achieving meaningful participation of people who use drugs and their peer organizations in a strategic research partnership.

TL;DR: This paper draws on the experiences and findings of the What Works and Why (W3) Project, a 5-year collaborative study with peer organizations to develop a framework to demonstrate the role of peer organizations within their community and policy systems.