Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Homelessness as a Lifestyle

Homelessness as a Lifestyle AbstractFor those homeless people who are rejecting traditional social selVices, one may have to be able to treat their symptoms as secondary while looking beyond them for primary social patterns. This reveals a lifestyle devastated by disaffiliation and social distance. People who have been homeless for a long time can be shown to be suffering from a lifestyle of homelessness or from “homelessness-as-a-lifestyle.” This is a condition, the components of which often include early life transiency, impulsiveness, clusters of unsolved problems, as well as a lack of social and other supports. These lifestyle elements interact with one another in perpetuating fashion, dragging the person along in an undertow, one result of which is downward mobility. Four case studies demonstrate examples of this social condition. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Social Distress and Homeless Taylor & Francis

Homelessness as a Lifestyle

Journal of Social Distress and Homeless , Volume 7 (4): 21 – Jan 1, 1998

Homelessness as a Lifestyle

Journal of Social Distress and Homeless , Volume 7 (4): 21 – Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

AbstractFor those homeless people who are rejecting traditional social selVices, one may have to be able to treat their symptoms as secondary while looking beyond them for primary social patterns. This reveals a lifestyle devastated by disaffiliation and social distance. People who have been homeless for a long time can be shown to be suffering from a lifestyle of homelessness or from “homelessness-as-a-lifestyle.” This is a condition, the components of which often include early life transiency, impulsiveness, clusters of unsolved problems, as well as a lack of social and other supports. These lifestyle elements interact with one another in perpetuating fashion, dragging the person along in an undertow, one result of which is downward mobility. Four case studies demonstrate examples of this social condition.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/taylor-francis/homelessness-as-a-lifestyle-UAvDAxtg8j

References (12)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright 1998 Taylor and Francis Group LLC
ISSN
1573-658X
eISSN
1053-0789
DOI
10.1023/A:1022991227609
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractFor those homeless people who are rejecting traditional social selVices, one may have to be able to treat their symptoms as secondary while looking beyond them for primary social patterns. This reveals a lifestyle devastated by disaffiliation and social distance. People who have been homeless for a long time can be shown to be suffering from a lifestyle of homelessness or from “homelessness-as-a-lifestyle.” This is a condition, the components of which often include early life transiency, impulsiveness, clusters of unsolved problems, as well as a lack of social and other supports. These lifestyle elements interact with one another in perpetuating fashion, dragging the person along in an undertow, one result of which is downward mobility. Four case studies demonstrate examples of this social condition.

Journal

Journal of Social Distress and HomelessTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 1998

Keywords: Homelessness; Lifestyle; Sociology of homelessness; Case studies of homelessness; Disaffiliation

There are no references for this article.