Homeless Near a Thousand Homes

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A01=Bryan Glastonbury
Accommodation Hostel
Author_Bryan Glastonbury
Category=JKSN
Child Care Officer
Children's Department
Children's Health and Housing Departments
Children's Officer
Children’s Department
Children’s Officer
Department of Heath and Social Security
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family breakdown impact
government policies
Homeless Families
housing insecurity
housing management
Housing Manager
housing shortages
IOS
Large Families
Local Authority
local authority case studies
Local Authority Welfare
National Assistance Act
Port Talbot
Possession Order
poverty
poverty and urban deprivation
Probation and After-Care Service
Rent Arrears
Rent Guarantee
Seebohm Report
social policy research
Social Service Department
social services
social services response to homelessness
social work
South Wales
Sub-standard Properties
Supplementary Benefits
Supplementary Benefits Commission
Supplementary Benefits Officer
Survey Area
Swansea
Temporary Accommodation
unemployment
Unsatisfactory Tenants
Welfare Officer
welfare services analysis
West Country

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032051123
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Who becomes homeless? Why? What stresses and strains do these people face? Does losing a home provoke other problems or is it a sequel to them? How far do government policies and provisions go towards meeting the needs of the homeless? What changes would be desirable? To what extent is homelessness due to housing shortages?

Originally published in 1971, these and other questions are tackled in this study of the development of services for the homeless. It is based on detailed investigation of provisions in South Wales and the West Country and is a study of the lives of over 500 families who, at some stage since 1963, had lost their homes. Hitherto studies of homelessness had been restricted to London or other big urban centres. The questions posed and answered here are much more general, and relevant to all parts of the country at the time.

Information for the survey came from the records kept in Local Authority Welfare, Children’s Health and Housing Departments, the Probation and After-Care Service, local offices of the Department of Health and Social Security, and many voluntary organizations. The findings suggest that, in the areas studied, homelessness was worse than anticipated, and that its demands on the social services were similar in range but different in order of priority from those in the metropolis. Poor housing conditions remain an important feature, reinforced by unhelpful attitudes in housing management. Housing shortages are important for large families and those who cannot be self-dependent – more so than for others. Looming over the whole picture is homelessness resulting from broken marriages and family disputes, with the attendant difficulties of unsupported motherhood, poverty, sickness and unemployment.

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