2021
DOI: 10.1080/08882746.2021.1922044
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Pandemic precarity and everyday disparity: gendered housing needs in North America

Abstract: We identify key issues for housing researchers, practitioners, and advocates working in the United States and Canada to consider, both during the COVID-19 pandemic and far beyond. First, we draw upon feminist and intersectional literatures on gendered inequalities and social structures, which provide the often forgotten or overlooked context for women's experiences in housing. This includes the broader insight that too frequently, women have not been involved in shaping the policy and planning climate around h… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This combination appears to have helped address some elements of the complex requirements of people experiencing SPMI. The development of targeted housing interventions that support the physical and mental well‐being of individuals to live as independently as possible in the community are important areas of inquiry, especially in light of the increasing recognition of housing precarity that has been amplified by the COVID‐19 pandemic and other current‐state socio‐economic realities of housing (Parker & Leviten‐Reid, 2022; Pawson, 2021). A significant practice implication arising from this study is that supported housing arrangements like those offered by CHO models can offer increased personalized and appropriate touch‐points with the health care system by explicitly linking housing and community mental health services.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This combination appears to have helped address some elements of the complex requirements of people experiencing SPMI. The development of targeted housing interventions that support the physical and mental well‐being of individuals to live as independently as possible in the community are important areas of inquiry, especially in light of the increasing recognition of housing precarity that has been amplified by the COVID‐19 pandemic and other current‐state socio‐economic realities of housing (Parker & Leviten‐Reid, 2022; Pawson, 2021). A significant practice implication arising from this study is that supported housing arrangements like those offered by CHO models can offer increased personalized and appropriate touch‐points with the health care system by explicitly linking housing and community mental health services.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Extended lockdowns prompted new relations to, and with, the ‘home’ as a space of confinement, intensified social interactions, social isolation, safety, and risk (Watson et al, 2021; Wiles, 2021). As feminist geographers have revealed, gender inequities and affective intensities in the home were felt particularly strongly by women (Bowlby & Jupp, 2021; Parker & Leviten-Reid, 2022). Experiences of the home environment were highly variable among our participants (Thorpe, Brice, et al, 2023).…”
Section: Analysis and Discussion: Deterritorializing The Fitness Asse...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women who experience street involvement (SI) are regularly at the severe end of the spectrum for gender-based violence (GBV) severity, duration, and type ( Boyd et al, 2018 ; Oppal, 2012 ; Parker & Leviten-Reid, 2022 ). They are also more likely to be killed and continue to experience violence throughout their lives when compared to other groups of women ( Davies et al, 2015 ; Oppal, 2012 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%