Families on the Edge: Experiences of Homelessness and Care in Rural New England

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Description

An intimate account of rural New England families living on the edge of homelessness, as well as the practices and policies of care that fail them.Families on the Edge is an ethnographic portrait of families in rural and small-town New England who are often undercut by the very systems that are set up to help them. In this book, author and medical anthropologist Elizabeth Carpenter-Song draws on a decade of ethnographic research to chart the struggles of a cohort of families she met in a Vermont family shelter in 2009, as they contend with housing insecurity, mental illness, and substance use. Few other works have attempted to take such a long-term view of how vulnerability to homelessness unfolds over time or to engage so fully with existing scholarship in the fields of anthropology and health services.Research on homelessness in the United States has been overwhelmingly conducted in urban settings, so much less is known about its trajectory in rural areas and small towns. Carpenter-Song’s book identifies how specific aspects of rural New England—including scarce affordable housing stock, extremely limited transportation, and cultural expectations of self-reliance—come together to thwart opportunities for families despite their continual striving to “make it” in this environment. Carpenter-Song shines a light on the many high-stakes consequences that occur when systems of care fail and offers a way forward for clinicians, health researchers, and policymakers seeking practical solutions.

Additional information

Weight 0.24 kg
Dimensions 1.3 × 15.24 × 22.86 cm
PubliCanadanadation City/Country

USA

by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

192

Publisher

Year Published

2023-8-15

Imprint

ISBN 10

0262546183

About The Author

Elizabeth Carpenter-Song is currently Research Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth College. Her work has been published in journals ranging from Ethos to Psychiatric Services to Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless.

Other text

“This searing, intimate ethnography of five rural New England families, struggling with homelessness, disabilities, and financial insecurity, analyzes ‘paradoxes of care’ of state and healthcare services that lead to dismantling families, and concludes at decade’s end with successful post-homeless security, and a passionate call for nonpunitive compassionate services.”—Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good, Professor of Global Health and Social Medicine, emerita Harvard Medical School, Harvard University “At long last, a fiercely argued ethnography that refuses the reductive simplicities of ‘homelessness.’ There for the long haul, Families on the Edge captures the distinctive contours of rural precarity: its hardscrabble intimacies, makeshift economies, oft-hapless social assistance, and fraught, hazardous moral project of parenting.”—Kim Hopper, Professor of Clinical Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

Table Of Content

Acknowledgments viiPrelude xi1 Introduction 12 Becoming Homeless in Rural New England 173 Life on the Edge 454 Paradoxes of Care 715 Shattered Families 976 Toward Security Following Homelessness 1217 Conclusion 137Epilogue: Notes from the Pandemic 147Appendix: Family Housing Trajectories 149Notes 153References 159Index 173

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