Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First

The Housing First (HF) approach to counteracting homelessness, stemming from the USA, is advocated as a blueprint for homelessness policy change in Europe, including the Nordic countries. In contrast to traditional homelessness policies based on shelters as the first step towards ending homelessness...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cecilia Hansen Löfstrand, Kirsi Juhila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2021-08-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/4273
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spelling doaj-ef26d17c36d048738aa1870d1b7e765e2021-08-26T10:32:42ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032021-08-019321422210.17645/si.v9i3.42732121Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing FirstCecilia Hansen Löfstrand0Kirsi Juhila1Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg, SwedenFaculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, FinlandThe Housing First (HF) approach to counteracting homelessness, stemming from the USA, is advocated as a blueprint for homelessness policy change in Europe, including the Nordic countries. In contrast to traditional homelessness policies based on shelters as the first step towards ending homelessness, the HF policy discourse regards access to one’s own housing as a basic human right that should not be conditional upon good or acceptable behaviour. Building on ethnographic research in a Swedish HF unit striving to implement the HF approach ‘by the book,’ which includes both focus group interviews with workers and observations of worker–client interactions during home visits, we show how the new HF policy challenges both workers and clients, who used to encounter each other in shelters but now meet in clients’ own homes, transforming their identities. We demonstrate how workers account for transformations in worker–client identities by referring to how they and their clients used to think, talk and act, thus contrasting their new identities with their former selves. Moreover, in their efforts to accomplish their actual work tasks within the framework of the new HF policy discourse in the homes of formerly homeless clients, we show how workers struggle with their identities when they encounter clients in practice. In their accounts of policy change, the workers embraced their new identities with pleasure, but in practice, they were hesitant when dealing with issues of concern, such as their clients’ use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs. In sum, it becomes complicated in practice.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/4273homelessnesshousing firstworker–client identitiesdiscursive changepractice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cecilia Hansen Löfstrand
Kirsi Juhila
spellingShingle Cecilia Hansen Löfstrand
Kirsi Juhila
Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First
Social Inclusion
homelessness
housing first
worker–client identities
discursive change
practice
author_facet Cecilia Hansen Löfstrand
Kirsi Juhila
author_sort Cecilia Hansen Löfstrand
title Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First
title_short Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First
title_full Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First
title_fullStr Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First
title_full_unstemmed Transforming Worker–Client Identities: From Shelters to Housing First
title_sort transforming worker–client identities: from shelters to housing first
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2021-08-01
description The Housing First (HF) approach to counteracting homelessness, stemming from the USA, is advocated as a blueprint for homelessness policy change in Europe, including the Nordic countries. In contrast to traditional homelessness policies based on shelters as the first step towards ending homelessness, the HF policy discourse regards access to one’s own housing as a basic human right that should not be conditional upon good or acceptable behaviour. Building on ethnographic research in a Swedish HF unit striving to implement the HF approach ‘by the book,’ which includes both focus group interviews with workers and observations of worker–client interactions during home visits, we show how the new HF policy challenges both workers and clients, who used to encounter each other in shelters but now meet in clients’ own homes, transforming their identities. We demonstrate how workers account for transformations in worker–client identities by referring to how they and their clients used to think, talk and act, thus contrasting their new identities with their former selves. Moreover, in their efforts to accomplish their actual work tasks within the framework of the new HF policy discourse in the homes of formerly homeless clients, we show how workers struggle with their identities when they encounter clients in practice. In their accounts of policy change, the workers embraced their new identities with pleasure, but in practice, they were hesitant when dealing with issues of concern, such as their clients’ use of tobacco, alcohol and drugs. In sum, it becomes complicated in practice.
topic homelessness
housing first
worker–client identities
discursive change
practice
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/4273
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