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Working and Homeless: Exploring the Interaction of Housing and Labour Market Insecurity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2019

Katy Jones
Affiliation:
Manchester Metropolitan University E-mail: katy.jones@mmu.ac.uk
Anya Ahmed
Affiliation:
University of Salford E-mail: A.Ahmed@salford.ac.uk
Iolo Madoc-Jones
Affiliation:
Wrexham Glyndŵr niversity E-mail: i.m.jones@glyndwr.ac.uk
Andrea Gibbons
Affiliation:
University of Salford E-mail: A.R.Gibbons1@salford.ac.uk
Michaela Rogers
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield E-mail: m.rogers@sheffield.ac.uk
Mark Wilding
Affiliation:
University of Salford E-mail: M.A.Wilding@salford.ac.uk

Abstract

Alongside an increasing focus on ‘prevention’, moving homeless adults into work is frequently considered an important part of helping them overcome homelessness and sustain an ‘independent’ life. However, a growing evidence base shows that work does not always offer the means to escape poverty, and many in employment face housing insecurity. Relatedly, there is increasing concern about the phenomenon of ‘in-work homelessness’. Drawing on new data from a study of people’s experience of homelessness in Wales, this article considers the hitherto underexplored topic of being both in work and homeless. The article provides a critical examination of how homelessness policy operates in practice, through presenting evidence of the experiences of a marginalised group (namely, working homeless people as users of homelessness services). It also considers how policy and practice could be modified to improve outcomes for homeless people and how prevention could play out in other contexts and welfare regimes.

Type
Themed Section: Homelessness Prevention in an International Policy Context
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019 

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