
Homelessness once was considered an aberration. Today it is a normalized feature of US society. It is also, argue Elizabeth Beck and Pamela Twiss, an industry: the embrace of neoliberal policies and piecemeal efforts to address the problem have ensured a steady production of homeless people, as well as a plethora of disjointed social services that often pathologize individuals instead of housing them. Tracing the transformation of homelessness from being a social-justice issue to one with solutions based on medical models and zero-sum-games analyses, Beck and Twiss explore how government policies and practices have served to shape our limited response to the problem. Equally important, they consider how a more just, human-rights-based approach might be effected. CONTENTS: The Making of the Homelessness Industry. Homelessness Today and Its Historical Roots. Competing Values: Neoliberalism and Social Justice. From Social Problem to Psychiatry. Early Federal Policy and the Fight for the McKinney Act. Implementation in a Hostile Context: The First Two Years of the McKinney Act. Services, Not Justice. From Managing to Ending Homelessness. The Present Continuing Quest for Justice.
Page Count:
287
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
ISBN-10:
1626377413
ISBN-13:
9781626377417
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