EstimatesAthensestimates and mapsAthensmaps of different forms of homelessness and poverty in Athens are produced by using FEANTSA'sFEANTSA ETHOSETHOS typology and Hopper'sHopper (Kim) classification of visible and invisible homelessness. Findings suggest a significant increase of (visible) homelessness mostly concerning people in various sheltersShelters and recently arrived immigrantsImmigrants, while roofless street persons are less numerous than expected. Existing provisions cannot address the dramatic increase of needs amongst the invisible poor, while there is an alarming deterioration of the physical and mental healthMental health amongst the visible homeless. Crisis interventions, along with intensified policing, lessen the visible aspects of homelessness, and forms of containment become evident in overcrowded prisons, Roma camps, and detention centres on the city periphery. AusterityAusterity policies curtail access to public services and serve to justifying discrimination.
CITATION STYLE
Arapoglou, V. P., & Gounis, K. (2017). Contested Landscapes of Homelessness in Athens. In Contested Landscapes of Poverty and Homelessness In Southern Europe (pp. 63–76). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-62452-5_4
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