Late-Life Homelessness

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A01=Amanda Grenier
Agency
Aging
Author_Amanda Grenier
Category=JBFC
Category=JBFD
Category=JKSG
City
Critical
Disadvantage
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnography
Everyday Lives
Gerontology
Homeless
Housing
Inequality
Insecurity
Life course
Lived Experience
Older People
Place
precarious
Qualitative Research
Resilience
Risk
Shelter
Social
Space
Stories
Strength
Structure
Studies
Uncertainty
unhomed
Vulnerability

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228008361
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jan 2022
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Around the world and across a range of contexts, homelessness among older people is on the rise. In spite of growing media attention and new academic research on the issue, older people often remain unrecognized as a subpopulation in public policy, programs, and homeless strategies. As such, they occupy a paradoxical position of being hypervisible while remaining overlooked.

Late-Life Homelessness is the first Canadian book to address this often neglected issue. Basing her analysis on a four-year ethnographic study of late-life homelessness in Montreal, Canada, Amanda Grenier uses a critical gerontological perspective to explore life at the intersection of aging and homelessness. She draws attention to disadvantage over time and how the condition of being unhoused disrupts a person’s ability to age in place, resulting in experiences of unequal aging. Weaving together findings from policy documents, stakeholder insights, and observations and interviews with older people, this book demonstrates how structures, organizational practices, and relationships related to homelessness and aging come to shape late life.

Situated in the context of an aging population, rising inequality, and declining social commitments, Late-Life Homelessness stresses the moral imperative of responding justly to the needs of older people as a means of mitigating the unequal aging of unhoused elders.

Amanda Grenier is professor and Norman and Honey Schipper Chair in Gerontological Social Work at the University of Toronto and Baycrest Hospital.

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