Homelessness is commonly associated with large urban settings. For people who sleep on the streets it encompasses experiences of stigma, regulation and displacement, marginalization, violence, loneliness, and bodily decline. This thesis addresses the lack of research into the everyday practices of homeless people in New Zealand through a detailed exploration of the experiences of four homeless people. Through critically engaging with relevant scholarly literature this study documents the importance of human fortitude, agency, and meaningful social engagements in the lives of homeless people. Attention is given to how four homeless people (Brett, Daniel, Joshua and Ariā) construct place-based identities and the relational, spatial and materi...
As an intense repository for human existence, the contemporary city is textured by scenes of homeles...
ii This anthropological thesis focuses on female homelessness in Christchurch, New Zealand. I am int...
With increased inequity and polarisation in society, access to leisure has become even more crucial ...
Homelessness is commonly associated with large urban settings. For people who sleep on the streets i...
Homelessness is a pressing and increasingly visible concern in New Zealand. Many people sleeping rou...
Homemaking is associated with domiciled family life, community, and secure work. Moving beyond this ...
There are a range of interventions and programmes to address the on-going issue of Māori homelessnes...
To be Māori is to have a tūrangawaewae (a place of strength and belonging, a place to stand). If so,...
Abstract People who are homeless are portrayed to be a distinct type of ‘homeless person’. Within sc...
Homelessness in Aotearoa/New Zealand has been a significant issue for many years, with Māori being c...
For domiciled individuals, homeless people provide a disturbing reminder that all is not right with ...
Homelessness is a pressing and increasingly visible concern in New Zealand. Many people sl...
Administrative and census data documented the increase of homelessness in Aotearoa New Zealand betwe...
Homelessness is a complex social issue affecting in excess of one billion people around the world. D...
For domiciled individuals, homeless people provide a disturbing reminder that all is not right with ...
As an intense repository for human existence, the contemporary city is textured by scenes of homeles...
ii This anthropological thesis focuses on female homelessness in Christchurch, New Zealand. I am int...
With increased inequity and polarisation in society, access to leisure has become even more crucial ...
Homelessness is commonly associated with large urban settings. For people who sleep on the streets i...
Homelessness is a pressing and increasingly visible concern in New Zealand. Many people sleeping rou...
Homemaking is associated with domiciled family life, community, and secure work. Moving beyond this ...
There are a range of interventions and programmes to address the on-going issue of Māori homelessnes...
To be Māori is to have a tūrangawaewae (a place of strength and belonging, a place to stand). If so,...
Abstract People who are homeless are portrayed to be a distinct type of ‘homeless person’. Within sc...
Homelessness in Aotearoa/New Zealand has been a significant issue for many years, with Māori being c...
For domiciled individuals, homeless people provide a disturbing reminder that all is not right with ...
Homelessness is a pressing and increasingly visible concern in New Zealand. Many people sl...
Administrative and census data documented the increase of homelessness in Aotearoa New Zealand betwe...
Homelessness is a complex social issue affecting in excess of one billion people around the world. D...
For domiciled individuals, homeless people provide a disturbing reminder that all is not right with ...
As an intense repository for human existence, the contemporary city is textured by scenes of homeles...
ii This anthropological thesis focuses on female homelessness in Christchurch, New Zealand. I am int...
With increased inequity and polarisation in society, access to leisure has become even more crucial ...