In this paper we discuss the apparent failure to couple together the constructs of ‘rurality’ and ‘homelessness’, and propose a critical deconstruction of this noncoupling. Three principal lines of arguments are employed. First, there are a range of physical and material reasons why rural and urban spaces have varying qualities for hiding or revealing homeless people, and why the embodied experiences of homelessness have varying geographies. Second, there are a series of obstacles that exist within the practices, thoughts, and discourses of rural dwellers themselves, which lead them to deny that homelessness exists in their place. Third, normalised conceptualisations about rurality and homelessness often serve to separate the two concepts, ...
This article attempts to engage with developing critical realist perspectives in housing and urban p...
Using qualitative data from a research project investigating contemporary rural identities in Englan...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...
In this paper we explore key issues bound up with the existence ofhomelessness in rural England. Att...
This paper investigates the discursive and practical policy issues relating to homelessness in rural...
Homelessness remains a neglected component of rural studies in Britain and Europe. Research has tend...
This paper explores the interconnected issues of mobility, power and meaning in the context of rural...
Until recently, homelessness in rural areas has received little recognition because of overwhelming ...
Relatively little attention has been given to the geographies of homelessness in England, still less...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...
This dissertation examines the specifically rural contours of inadequate housing in one community in...
Notwithstanding heightened awareness of the issues faced by homeless people, the notion that homeles...
For the 1998 Symposium on Homelessness Research, rural homelessness was not assigned as a paper topi...
Homelessness is often assumed to be an urban phenomenon because homeless people are more numerous, m...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...
This article attempts to engage with developing critical realist perspectives in housing and urban p...
Using qualitative data from a research project investigating contemporary rural identities in Englan...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...
In this paper we explore key issues bound up with the existence ofhomelessness in rural England. Att...
This paper investigates the discursive and practical policy issues relating to homelessness in rural...
Homelessness remains a neglected component of rural studies in Britain and Europe. Research has tend...
This paper explores the interconnected issues of mobility, power and meaning in the context of rural...
Until recently, homelessness in rural areas has received little recognition because of overwhelming ...
Relatively little attention has been given to the geographies of homelessness in England, still less...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...
This dissertation examines the specifically rural contours of inadequate housing in one community in...
Notwithstanding heightened awareness of the issues faced by homeless people, the notion that homeles...
For the 1998 Symposium on Homelessness Research, rural homelessness was not assigned as a paper topi...
Homelessness is often assumed to be an urban phenomenon because homeless people are more numerous, m...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...
This article attempts to engage with developing critical realist perspectives in housing and urban p...
Using qualitative data from a research project investigating contemporary rural identities in Englan...
Homelessness is largely understood as an urban issue and so rural homelessness is to a large extent ...