Structure and agency in capabilities-enhancing homeless services: Housing first, housing quality and consumer choice

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Abstract

The capabilities approach, a framework for understanding and measuring inequality, stipulates that equality is best understood as the freedom to do and be within a particular context. Homelessness has been referred to as a situation of ‘capabilities deprivation’, and the extent to which homeless services restore or enhance capabilities is of increasing interest. As part of a large, eight-country study of homelessness in Europe, we examined the extent to which adults with histories of homelessness perceived the services they receive as capabilities-enhancing. We collected data at two time points: baseline (nt1 = 565) and follow-up (nt2 = 399). Measures included perceived capabilities, choice and housing quality. Participants engaged with Housing First (HF) programmes perceived services as more capabilities-enhancing than participants engaged with treatment as usual (TAU); this relationship was mediated by consumer choice and perceived housing quality. Implications for social policy, practice and training are discussed.

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Greenwood, R. M., Manning, R. M., O’Shaughnessy, B. R., Vargas-Moniz, M. J., Auquier, P., Lenzi, M., … Ornelas, J. (2022). Structure and agency in capabilities-enhancing homeless services: Housing first, housing quality and consumer choice. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 32(2), 315–331. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.2577

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