Despite a recent upsurge of interest in the issue, homelessness is a problem of long standing in American society. This article traces how several forces catalyzed the problem\u27s re-entrance onto the political agenda in the 1980s. It then reviews the ongoing debate over homelessness causes and cures as a struggle for problem ownership that has complicated the choices of public policymakers. The final section examines various descriptive attributes that figure into the dispute over how to define homelessness and influence the nature of the public policy response to it
Drawing upon demographic data and ethnographic interviews conducted by the authors, the article addr...
Today, much of public policy debate takes place in a social vacuum. This is partly because policy is...
Various forms of housing exclusion are a reality for millions of people across the globe. For people...
This article considers the problem of poverty, with homelessness as the centerpiece. A survey of the...
Homelessness in the United States is a symptom of a much deeper economic and housing crisis — a wide...
In the 1980s federal policy combined with market forces to produce the American tragedy of homelessn...
As the United States grapples with increasing economic inequality and significant poverty, homelessn...
Massachusetts\u27s response to the tragedy of family homelessness during a period of economic prospe...
While unemployment rocked Massachusetts, housing costs remained at record levels, and the federal go...
An examination of the professional, political, and popular literature on the nature and extent of ho...
Homelessness is not a new phenomenon in Massachusetts, nor are the new homeless of the 1980s and 1...
Chronic homelessness has severe implications for health disparities. Black Americans are four times ...
Homelessness in the United States after World War II was primarily a problem of adult men, and initi...
The main objective of this paper was to study the policy implications of homelessness as it relates ...
Does eliminating homelessness primarily require social services or affordable housing? Research done...
Drawing upon demographic data and ethnographic interviews conducted by the authors, the article addr...
Today, much of public policy debate takes place in a social vacuum. This is partly because policy is...
Various forms of housing exclusion are a reality for millions of people across the globe. For people...
This article considers the problem of poverty, with homelessness as the centerpiece. A survey of the...
Homelessness in the United States is a symptom of a much deeper economic and housing crisis — a wide...
In the 1980s federal policy combined with market forces to produce the American tragedy of homelessn...
As the United States grapples with increasing economic inequality and significant poverty, homelessn...
Massachusetts\u27s response to the tragedy of family homelessness during a period of economic prospe...
While unemployment rocked Massachusetts, housing costs remained at record levels, and the federal go...
An examination of the professional, political, and popular literature on the nature and extent of ho...
Homelessness is not a new phenomenon in Massachusetts, nor are the new homeless of the 1980s and 1...
Chronic homelessness has severe implications for health disparities. Black Americans are four times ...
Homelessness in the United States after World War II was primarily a problem of adult men, and initi...
The main objective of this paper was to study the policy implications of homelessness as it relates ...
Does eliminating homelessness primarily require social services or affordable housing? Research done...
Drawing upon demographic data and ethnographic interviews conducted by the authors, the article addr...
Today, much of public policy debate takes place in a social vacuum. This is partly because policy is...
Various forms of housing exclusion are a reality for millions of people across the globe. For people...