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Vague Dwelling: An Archaeology of The Pelham Bay Park Homeless EncampmentSingleton, Courtney January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation is an archaeological investigation of a late 20th century homeless encampment in Pelham Bay Park, New York City. This project examines the relationship between aspects of dwelling and the social status of homelessness within an iconic urban setting in the United States. In contemporary public discourse, the meaning of "homelessness" seems self-evident to most people as a condition defined by lack: a lack of permanence in general and of a permanent dwelling place in particular, a lack of personal possessions and personal relations, and most consequentially, a lack of political status. This research interrogates these assumptions by reading homelessness through the material record that people left behind, of what they did have when they inhabited spaces outside the sanctioned institutions for the "homeless," spaces where people intentionally dwelled and created their own structures of home. This project returns us to the most basic questions in the study of homelessness in the United States: what exactly is homelessness, what does it mean to be homeless, and how are people marked or recognized as homeless within our society? In order to answer these questions, this research explores how boundaries defining homelessness manifest and are articulated within our society.
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We Are Not Responsible For Our Addictions, But We Are Responsible For Our Recovery": A Qualitative Exploratory Study Of The LiRayburn, Rachel 01 January 2008 (has links)
This is an exploratory, qualitative study of homeless, recovering alcoholics and the problems they encounter maintaining sobriety. Using semi-structured interviews, I analyze the experiences of ten men in their forties, who are in a recovery program designed for homeless men. I ask them how they stay sober without a place to live. Three kinds of problems are inferred from their narrative histories. First, the men have difficulty identifying as alcoholics. They have trouble fully integrating into the AA program. Second, the men struggle to form relationships with others, especially with a sponsor. Third, the process of "working the steps" is adapted complexly, more than in a normal twelve-step setting. The findings indicate that homeless men face special barriers to achieving and maintaining sobriety. I conclude by discussing the larger implications for sobriety, homelessness and social change within this community.
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The Changing 'Place' of Homeless Shelters in Cincinnati's Over-the-RhineTinney, Ashley Marie 16 August 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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The experience of homelessness viewed through the eyes of homeless school age children /Heusel, Karen DuBois January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Art for/of the unhomedKim, Na Hyun 27 June 2024 (has links)
The thesis begins by critiquing the use of a street, Broadway, in the Garment District, NYC, which primarily is used for display of public art. The main goal of the exhibition is to attract visitors so as to promote local business, according to the local alliance responsible for the display. This action actively neglects the needs of everyday users of the space: homeless individuals, employees, delivery workers, etc. This thesis serves as functional art, providing a space for all occupants to coexist while challenging the notion that homeless people are fundamentally different.
Focusing on the distinct architecture and zoning laws of New York City, this work examines the city's unique history with homelessness, including the recent historic amendment of the 'Right to Shelter' law. Additionally, it proposes a modification to Privately Owned Public Space (POPS) so that empty commercial spaces could benefit the public. This architectural exploration also involves thinking about temporary structures, light, urban layout, and landscaping.
By combining these artistic and architectural explorations, this thesis provides a framework for Broadway in Garment District of New York City for occupants to use, interact with, and modify, fostering an inclusive and adaptable urban space.
This thesis is functional art, architecture, and a framework. / Master of Architecture / Art for/of the unhomed envisions an inclusive urban space along Broadway in the Garment District, New York City. It critiques the existing use of the area, which primarily serves tourists and visitors while neglecting the needs of local occupants, including homeless individuals, employees, and delivery workers. To address this issue, the project proposes a series of street furniture and enclosures, complemented by the occupation of currently vacant commercial spaces in the area.
As an architectural thesis, the focus is on creating inhabitable spaces for these occupants. Concurrently, as an art thesis, the project emphasizes raising awareness about homelessness. The design provides amenities that support both survival and the expression of creativity. Utilizing a flexible framework of conventional wood framing and carpentry, the structures can be modified and adapted by the occupants themselves. This approach aims to foster a more inclusive and responsive urban environment.
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Homelessness and the postmodern home: narratives of cultural change /Hammond, Julia Leanne. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2006. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 224-233). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Understanding the perceived influence of social capital by homeless persons in Newton, KansasLimon, Lester Lloyd II January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Landscape Architecture/Regional & Community Planning / Stephanie Rolley / This is an exploratory study investigating: How those currently experiencing homelessness perceive the influence of bonding and bridging social capital on their future successful residential reintegration. It is an important consideration in understanding the emotional and intellectual circumstances of residents entering a rural shelter environment, and discovering what types of social capital residents need and have access to.
This research used phenomonography to gain access to the thoughts and opinions of residents of the Harvey County Homeless Shelter, coupled with grounded theory to discover emergent themes in those transcripts. The study topic was explored through direct inquiry of people experiencing homelessness in Newton, Kansas. Through an interview process, five areas of inquiry were studied: demographics, residential history, social connections, community connections, and social connectedness and community belonging. Using grounded theory methodology, the responses were coded and the writing of rich memos determined and explored themes.
Emergent themes; an analysis of their relevancy to the study topic; an examination of the areas the study topic satisfied; and, identification of areas where it failed to satisfy are topics of exploration concerning the findings. Community courtesy, individual personality, healthy relationships, and social connections over address were the four emergent themes to come from the five categories of inquiry. In general, resident’s perceptions of social capital were important to their future efforts toward residential reintegration, although in slightly different ways than the study topic assumed.
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Policing the theme park cityParenti, Christian January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Narratives of homelessness and displacement : Life testimonies of Cameroonian asylum seekers in JohannesburgPineteh, Ernest Angu 22 October 2008 (has links)
This thesis is based on an analysis of the life testimonies about homelessness and
displacement told by the Cameroonian refugee community in Johannesburg. It seeks to
understand not only the experiences and the conditions of migrancy within a specific
group of involuntarily displaced persons in an African city but also how these
experiences are constructed and reconstructed ‘in the telling’. The main thrust of the
thesis is a discourse analysis of the oral narratives and stories that Cameroonian asylum
seekers and refugees living in the city of Johannesburg tell about themselves, their past,
present and future, their journey to exile and their aspirations, memories of home and
sense of identity as forced migrants in a global era.
The data for this study was gleaned from a series of interviews with twenty Cameroonian
forced migrants and the interviews are used in this thesis as my primary texts. The
analysis focuses primarily on the narrative construction of migrant experiences, exploring
how Cameroonian forced migrants use varied narrative strategies and patterns to
articulate broader exilic discourses such as the construction of memory, identity and
spaces. Therefore, through the testimonies collected and recorded from my informants, I
was able to access individual lives as well as the subjective and collective experiences of
Cameroonian forced migrants, and explore how they interpret and construct these
experiences. Also, the testimonies provided a platform from which to examine how
Cameroonian forced migrants narrativise exilic experiences, construct identities,
remember the past and represent diasporic spaces.
The study has produced a number of significant outcomes. Firstly, the testimonies tend to
represent exile as a place that provides solutions for the predicaments of displaced
persons. Secondly, the study also reveals that migrant narratives can be multidimensional
and multi-functional if individual experiences and element of time are taken
into account. This is evident from the multiple, shifting and somewhat contesting
narratives produced by different respondents.
Thirdly, because of these narrative features, the testimonies are often affected by the
logic of ambivalence, emerging from the constant subversion and undermining of the
same narratives using different narrative patterns, metaphors, images and symbols.
Finally, the multiplicity, subversion and the shifts of the narratives therefore draw our
attention to the fact that testimonies from the same refugee community have the
potentials of generating different interpretations of shared experiences of displacement.
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Local council's response to street homelessness in WelkomOkumu, Moses 26 October 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Arts
School of Humanities
0400617v
mosmakoso@yahoo.com
Degree of master housing / The aim of the study was to investigate, how Welkom council is responding to street
homelessness in Welkom. The democratic government adopted, the Reconstruction and
Development Programme, as an integrated socio-economic policy framework, to
mobilize national, and human resources, towards a sustainable housing for urban, and
rural poor. However, despite, the government’s concerted commitment to providing
massive housing for its citizens, the problem of homelessness, remains pervasive. Three
themes, which emerged as critical during the study, are discussed in detail, namely, lack
of housing policy, addressing specifically street homelessness; lack of financial and legal
mandate, by the local council, to house street homelessness; and lack of research
department, and human resources for effective conceptualization of the issue. It is argued
that the department of research is critical in providing strategic research facilities, in areas
of housing policy, and legislation frameworks. Equally critical, is the need for skilled
human resources, necessary for strategic and holistic provision of efficient and effective
services. The study suggests complete overhaul of the national housing policy making it
holistically inclusive. Equally suggested, is capacity building necessary for sustainable,
efficient, and effective housing delivery and eradication of homelessness.
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