Homelessness and aging: The contradictory ordering of 'house' and 'home'.

J Aging Stud

Department of Research and Academics, Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences, 700 Gordon Street, Whitby, ON L1N 5S9, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: December 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The concepts of 'house' and 'home' create a complex contrast, representing stability and care for older individuals, yet, challenges arise in addressing aging and homelessness.
  • The ideal of 'home' for older people clashes with housing programs aimed at the homeless, highlighting systemic issues in providing adequate living environments.
  • The research emphasizes the necessity of a life course perspective to address inequalities and improve understanding of homelessness among older adults, based on a study conducted in Montreal.

Article Abstract

The concepts of 'house' and 'home' are compelling and contradictory. They are compelling because they elicit the desired sentiments of permanence, feeling 'at home', and maintaining continuity in one's life. At the same time, they can be experienced as contradictory where organizational practices and the socio-cultural imperatives of individual responsibility, cost containment, and rationed services are concerned. Where 'house' tends to evoke a sense of permanent stability, 'home' is regarded as the ideal living environment and site of care for older people. Yet, a consideration of the challenges that occur at the intersections of age and homelessness highlights a tension between the taken-for-granted ideal of 'home' for older people, and programs organized around 'housing' for homeless people. To begin, we ground our work in a critical perspective to the study of aging and briefly sketch the state of knowledge on homelessness in late life. We then explore the contradictions that occur at the intersections of age and homelessness, including the discursive ordering of 'house' and 'home,' the configurations of access and barriers, and aging in undesirable locations. In our conclusion, we draw attention to inequalities and the need for a life course perspective to ground future thinking. Our conceptual discussion is based on insights gained from a 3-year project on older homelessness in Montreal, Canada.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaging.2016.11.002DOI Listing

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