Publication:
'Near and Far': Social distancing in domiciled characterisations of homeless people

Abstract

For domiciled individuals, homeless people provide a disturbing reminder that all is not right with the world. Reactions to seeing homeless people frequently encompass repulsion, discomfort, sympathy and sometimes futility. This paper considers domiciled constructions of homeless people drawn from interviews with 16 participants recruited in the central business district of a New Zealand city. It documents how, when trying to make sense of this complex social problem, domiciled people draw on shared characterisations of homeless people. The concept of ‘social distance’ is used to interrogate the shifting and sometimes incongruous reactions evident in participant accounts. ‘Social distancing’ is conceptualised as a dynamic communal practice existing in interactions between human beings and reflected in the ways that domiciled people talk about their experiences with homeless individuals.

Citation

Hodgetts, D., Stolte, O., Radley, A., Leggatt-Cook, C., Groot, S. & Chamberlain, K. (2010). 'Near and Far': Social distancing in domiciled characterisations of homeless people. Urban Studies, available online on November 17, 2010.

Series name

Date

Publisher

Sage

Degree

Type of thesis

Supervisor

DOI

Link to supplementary material

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue