In this chapter, we examine the shelter experience for homeless mothers, particularly those with young children. We review the literature on women with children living in homeless shelters and draw from the findings of our research on homeless women living in shelters and transitional housing in the midwestern United States from 1990 through 2002. This research included in-depth interviews conducted over a twelve-year period with almost 200 women residing in emergency homeless shelters, battered women\u27s shelters, or transitional housing for single-parent families. For this chapter, we draw from the data on sheltered homeless mothers living with or separated from their children. We begin with a consideration of the pathways to the shelter...
Family homelessness has emerged as a serious global problem (Stronge, 2000). Over the past 25 years ...
Family homelessness has increased dramatically in the past decade, but little attention has been foc...
Women living with their children in residential treatment family homeless shelters are often stigmat...
In this chapter, we examine the shelter experience for homeless mothers, particularly those with you...
Over the course of the last two decades, homelessness has become one of America\u27s major social pr...
Family homelessness is one of the most profound and disturbing social problems of the 21st century a...
Homeless mothers and their dependent children make up the fastest\ud growing segment of the homeless...
Homeless women and families are among the most disenfranchised groups in society. Further, because o...
Homelessness among female-headed families in the United States is increasing. Up from 1 percent in t...
Homeless adolescent mothers are a growing subpopulation of the homeless. Previous studies focused on...
Homeless families are a rising proportion of the contemporary homeless population. However, no data ...
Researchers usually define a homeless family as those parents accompanied by minor children. This st...
This research draws on a ten-month ethnography of a domestic violence shelter. While the central res...
The number of homeless families is on the rise. ln 1989 more than 60,000 families nationwide, four t...
Researchers usually define a homeless family as those parents accompanied by minor children. This st...
Family homelessness has emerged as a serious global problem (Stronge, 2000). Over the past 25 years ...
Family homelessness has increased dramatically in the past decade, but little attention has been foc...
Women living with their children in residential treatment family homeless shelters are often stigmat...
In this chapter, we examine the shelter experience for homeless mothers, particularly those with you...
Over the course of the last two decades, homelessness has become one of America\u27s major social pr...
Family homelessness is one of the most profound and disturbing social problems of the 21st century a...
Homeless mothers and their dependent children make up the fastest\ud growing segment of the homeless...
Homeless women and families are among the most disenfranchised groups in society. Further, because o...
Homelessness among female-headed families in the United States is increasing. Up from 1 percent in t...
Homeless adolescent mothers are a growing subpopulation of the homeless. Previous studies focused on...
Homeless families are a rising proportion of the contemporary homeless population. However, no data ...
Researchers usually define a homeless family as those parents accompanied by minor children. This st...
This research draws on a ten-month ethnography of a domestic violence shelter. While the central res...
The number of homeless families is on the rise. ln 1989 more than 60,000 families nationwide, four t...
Researchers usually define a homeless family as those parents accompanied by minor children. This st...
Family homelessness has emerged as a serious global problem (Stronge, 2000). Over the past 25 years ...
Family homelessness has increased dramatically in the past decade, but little attention has been foc...
Women living with their children in residential treatment family homeless shelters are often stigmat...