While unemployment rocked Massachusetts, housing costs remained at record levels, and the federal government continued its inattention to housing and human service programs, the numbers of homeless families sheltered by the commonwealth of Massachusetts declined. This article examines the changes over the last decade in the way Massachusetts provides shelter to homeless families. What has in fact changed for homeless families, Marsh contends, is whether the state of Massachusetts considers them homeless. An increasingly complicated and burdensome set of rules has become a highly effective gatekeeper that keeps the commonwealth\u27s shelter expenditures down and homeless families out
Rural Homelessness in the Upper Valley is about the problems and advantages small shelters in the Up...
Note: The PDF of this article includes web supplements which did not appear in the original print ve...
Homelessness in the United States after World War II was primarily a problem of adult men, and initi...
This article, which examines epidemiological and policy correlates of homeless populations in 351 Ma...
Homelessness is not a new phenomenon in Massachusetts, nor are the new homeless of the 1980s and 1...
Massachusetts\u27s response to the tragedy of family homelessness during a period of economic prospe...
This article considers the problem of poverty, with homelessness as the centerpiece. A survey of the...
Despite a recent upsurge of interest in the issue, homelessness is a problem of long standing in Ame...
In the 1980s federal policy combined with market forces to produce the American tragedy of homelessn...
In Massachusetts, more than half a million children (15% of all children) live in poverty, 30% of al...
Does eliminating homelessness primarily require social services or affordable housing? Research done...
Massachusetts is at a critical juncture in its care for homeless individuals. In the face of a charg...
When Governor Michael S. Dukakis reentered the State House in January 1983, he focused his inaugural...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2012.Th...
The new homeless are more diverse, encompassing more minorities, women, younger people, and more f...
Rural Homelessness in the Upper Valley is about the problems and advantages small shelters in the Up...
Note: The PDF of this article includes web supplements which did not appear in the original print ve...
Homelessness in the United States after World War II was primarily a problem of adult men, and initi...
This article, which examines epidemiological and policy correlates of homeless populations in 351 Ma...
Homelessness is not a new phenomenon in Massachusetts, nor are the new homeless of the 1980s and 1...
Massachusetts\u27s response to the tragedy of family homelessness during a period of economic prospe...
This article considers the problem of poverty, with homelessness as the centerpiece. A survey of the...
Despite a recent upsurge of interest in the issue, homelessness is a problem of long standing in Ame...
In the 1980s federal policy combined with market forces to produce the American tragedy of homelessn...
In Massachusetts, more than half a million children (15% of all children) live in poverty, 30% of al...
Does eliminating homelessness primarily require social services or affordable housing? Research done...
Massachusetts is at a critical juncture in its care for homeless individuals. In the face of a charg...
When Governor Michael S. Dukakis reentered the State House in January 1983, he focused his inaugural...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2012.Th...
The new homeless are more diverse, encompassing more minorities, women, younger people, and more f...
Rural Homelessness in the Upper Valley is about the problems and advantages small shelters in the Up...
Note: The PDF of this article includes web supplements which did not appear in the original print ve...
Homelessness in the United States after World War II was primarily a problem of adult men, and initi...