Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada

Homelessness in Canada is a large and growing problem affecting more than 235,000 men, women, youth, and families per year, in urban, suburban, rural and Northern communities. Though it is produced by economic and policy drivers including colonization, income insecurity, and state withdrawal from ho...

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Main Author: Emily Paradis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2016-10-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/670
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spelling doaj-0e76e64d0d894fc2ade952b3023664212020-11-24T22:48:08ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032016-10-01449710710.17645/si.v4i4.670400Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in CanadaEmily Paradis0Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, Toronto University, CanadaHomelessness in Canada is a large and growing problem affecting more than 235,000 men, women, youth, and families per year, in urban, suburban, rural and Northern communities. Though it is produced by economic and policy drivers including colonization, income insecurity, and state withdrawal from housing provision, policies on homelessness tend to focus on service provision rather than addressing root causes. This article reviews activist, advocacy, service and policy responses to homelessness in Canada, and in particular, homeless sector conferences. Taking as its starting-point a demonstration at a 2014 national conference on homelessness, it examines these conferences as important sites of governance in which service organizations collaborate in the development and delivery of policy. Conferences’ normative culture, and their discursive construction of homelessness as a technical problem, tend to leave unchallenged the prevailing economic, social, political and institutional arrangements that produce homelessness. Recent interventions by people facing homelessness and their allies, though, have claimed discursive space at national homelessness conferences for outsider perspectives and demands. These interventions open possibilities for new alliances, analyses, and tactics that are necessary for ending homelessness.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/670activismconferencesgovernancehomelessnesslived experience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emily Paradis
spellingShingle Emily Paradis
Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada
Social Inclusion
activism
conferences
governance
homelessness
lived experience
author_facet Emily Paradis
author_sort Emily Paradis
title Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada
title_short Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada
title_full Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada
title_fullStr Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Outsiders Within: Claiming Discursive Space at National Homelessness Conferences in Canada
title_sort outsiders within: claiming discursive space at national homelessness conferences in canada
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Homelessness in Canada is a large and growing problem affecting more than 235,000 men, women, youth, and families per year, in urban, suburban, rural and Northern communities. Though it is produced by economic and policy drivers including colonization, income insecurity, and state withdrawal from housing provision, policies on homelessness tend to focus on service provision rather than addressing root causes. This article reviews activist, advocacy, service and policy responses to homelessness in Canada, and in particular, homeless sector conferences. Taking as its starting-point a demonstration at a 2014 national conference on homelessness, it examines these conferences as important sites of governance in which service organizations collaborate in the development and delivery of policy. Conferences’ normative culture, and their discursive construction of homelessness as a technical problem, tend to leave unchallenged the prevailing economic, social, political and institutional arrangements that produce homelessness. Recent interventions by people facing homelessness and their allies, though, have claimed discursive space at national homelessness conferences for outsider perspectives and demands. These interventions open possibilities for new alliances, analyses, and tactics that are necessary for ending homelessness.
topic activism
conferences
governance
homelessness
lived experience
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/670
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