This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization and examines whether family characteristics are associated with those patterns. The results indicate that a substantial majority of homeless families stay in public shelters for relatively brief periods, exit, and do not return. Approximately 20 percent stay for long periods. A small but noteworthy proportion cycles in and out of shelters repeatedly. In general, families with long stays are no more likely than families with short stays to have intensive behavioral health treatment histories, to be disabled, or to be unemployed. Families with repeat stays have the highest rates of intensive behavioral health treatment, placement of children in ...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Homeless women and families are among the most disenfranchised groups in society. Further, because o...
Homelessness has become one of the largest and most intractable problems of modernity. The State of ...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
Families with children comprise 40% of the homeless population. Most are headed by single women with...
Although research has documented the majority of homelessness experienced by individuals and familie...
Family homelessness has emerged as a serious global problem (Stronge, 2000). Over the past 25 years ...
This study examines the role of individual- and family-level factors in predicting the length of she...
This study explores the process of exit from and reentry to public family shelters for homeless fami...
mmm.edu The present study used data from 132 families that were homeless and a comparison group of 4...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Homelessness has become one of the largest and most intractable problems of modernity. The State of ...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Homeless women and families are among the most disenfranchised groups in society. Further, because o...
Homelessness has become one of the largest and most intractable problems of modernity. The State of ...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
Families with children comprise 40% of the homeless population. Most are headed by single women with...
Although research has documented the majority of homelessness experienced by individuals and familie...
Family homelessness has emerged as a serious global problem (Stronge, 2000). Over the past 25 years ...
This study examines the role of individual- and family-level factors in predicting the length of she...
This study explores the process of exit from and reentry to public family shelters for homeless fami...
mmm.edu The present study used data from 132 families that were homeless and a comparison group of 4...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Homelessness has become one of the largest and most intractable problems of modernity. The State of ...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Changing attitudes toward the poor are producing sweeping revisions in public welfare. The homeless ...
Homeless women and families are among the most disenfranchised groups in society. Further, because o...
Homelessness has become one of the largest and most intractable problems of modernity. The State of ...