Abstract
This paper describes the experiences of young homeless people in Western Australia during their transitions to more permanent accommodation and independent living. For these young homeless people, permanent accommodation provided an opportunity for ‘feeling at home’ and having a sense of control and stability associated with ‘home’. Within this space, these young people wanted to be considered ‘normal’ home occupiers. In this context, the paper discusses how young homeless people experience and negotiate the social and cultural understandings of home outside socially accepted pathways of leaving the parental home and becoming ‘normal’ home occupiers themselves. The paper shows how this experience of home, and the potential it offers previously homeless young people, is interrupted by discourses of youth workers, neighbours and society at large, which serve to (re)position them outside the community of ‘normal’ home occupiers. The findings have implications for both policy and the delivery of services to young homeless people.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank the young people who shared their stories and experiences with them. They are grateful to Mark Goerke from Anglicare WA, who managed the study, as well as for the support received from staff at Anglicare WA, Mercy, Mission Australia, Salvation Army, Joondalup Youth Support Services, Swan Emergency Accommodation Services and Fremantle Youth Support Services as well as Department for Community Development and Youth Affairs Council of Western Australia. The authors are also thankful to Lotterywest; without their funding this study would not have been possible.
Notes
1 Homeswest refers to the State Government Department of Housing and Works in charge of the provision of public housing