Interconnecting housing,homelessness and rurality: evidence from local authority homelessness officers in England and Wales |
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Affiliation: | 1. Intensive Care Unit, Ospedale Regionale di Lugano, Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale, Lugano, Switzerland;2. Sasso Corbaro Medical Humanities Foundation, Bellinzona, Switzerland;3. Psychiatry Consultation Liaison Service, Organizzazione Sociopsichiatrica Cantonale, Mendrisio, Switzerland;4. Département d’Histoire des Sciences et de la Vie et de la Santé, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France;5. Department of Psychiatric Neurophysiology, University Hospital of Psychiatry, Bern, Switzerland;6. Intensive Care Unit, Ospedale Regionale Bellinzona e Valli, Bellinzona, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | This paper investigates the discursive and practical policy issues relating to homelessness in rural areas of England and Wales. It begins with the argument that such homelessness does represent a significant but under-emphasised problem in rural areas. Official government counting of rural homelessness itself underestimates the scale of the problem, but provides a starting point for an understanding of more hidden forms of homelessness. We suggest a number of ways in which rural homelessness is less visible than its well-publicised urban counterpart, relating to the morphology of rural areas, social-cultural constructs of idyll-ic rural living, and conceptual assumptions which render homelessness as out-of-place in purified rural spaces. We then report on findings from a survey of local authority homelessness officers in England and Wales and in-depth interviews with officers in the counties of Somerset and Gloucestershire. Seeing the issues through the eyes of these practitioners clarifies a number of strands of the invisibility of rural homelessness, and points to very significant interconnections between ‘housing’ and ‘homelessness’ discourses in the local rural policy process. |
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