This study investigates hypotheses regarding the association of census tract variables with the risk for homelessness. We used prior address information reported by families entering emergency shelters in two large U.S. cities to characterize the nature of that distribution. Three dense clusters of homeless origins were found in Philadelphia and three in New York City, accounting for 67 percent and 61 percent of shelter admissions and revealing that homeless families’ prior addresses are more highly concentrated than the poverty distribution in both cities. The rate of shelter admission is strongly and positively related to the concentration of poor, African-American, and female-headed households with young children in a neighborhood. It is...
This article, which examines epidemiological and policy correlates of homeless populations in 351 Ma...
This study explores the dynamic combination of structural factors domestic conditions, individual an...
It is generally believed that the increased incidence of homelessness in the United States has arise...
This study investigates hypotheses regarding the association of census tract variables with the risk...
Previous estimates of the size and composition of the U.S. homeless population have been based on cr...
This dissertation analyzes the differences among homeless rates in urban and suburban “continuums of...
45 pagesUnsheltered homeless in the United States commonly identify as chronically homeless per the ...
This study explores the process of exit from and reentry to public family shelters for homeless fami...
This study examined incarceration histories and shelter use patterns of 7,022 persons staying in pub...
It is generally believed that the increased incidence of homelessness in the United States has arise...
This study tests a typology of homelessness using administrative data on public shelter use in New Y...
Objectives. This study reports findings from the first-ever systematic enumeration of homeless popul...
Sociological research on homelessness has long considered its structural determinants, mainly those ...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
Previous estimates of the size and composition of the U.S. homeless population have been based on cr...
This article, which examines epidemiological and policy correlates of homeless populations in 351 Ma...
This study explores the dynamic combination of structural factors domestic conditions, individual an...
It is generally believed that the increased incidence of homelessness in the United States has arise...
This study investigates hypotheses regarding the association of census tract variables with the risk...
Previous estimates of the size and composition of the U.S. homeless population have been based on cr...
This dissertation analyzes the differences among homeless rates in urban and suburban “continuums of...
45 pagesUnsheltered homeless in the United States commonly identify as chronically homeless per the ...
This study explores the process of exit from and reentry to public family shelters for homeless fami...
This study examined incarceration histories and shelter use patterns of 7,022 persons staying in pub...
It is generally believed that the increased incidence of homelessness in the United States has arise...
This study tests a typology of homelessness using administrative data on public shelter use in New Y...
Objectives. This study reports findings from the first-ever systematic enumeration of homeless popul...
Sociological research on homelessness has long considered its structural determinants, mainly those ...
This study tests a typology of family homelessness based on patterns of public shelter utilization a...
Previous estimates of the size and composition of the U.S. homeless population have been based on cr...
This article, which examines epidemiological and policy correlates of homeless populations in 351 Ma...
This study explores the dynamic combination of structural factors domestic conditions, individual an...
It is generally believed that the increased incidence of homelessness in the United States has arise...