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Costing in context: strategic choices in economic analyses of homelessness responses in the USA, Canada and the UK
List of Titles
Costing in context: strategic choices in economic analyses of homelessness responses in the USA, Canada and the UK
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/267
- Title
- Costing in context: strategic choices in economic analyses of homelessness responses in the USA, Canada and the UK
- Author(s)
- Pinkney, Sarah; Ewing, Scott
- Abstract
- Building on the review undertaken by Berry et al. (2003) for the National Homelessness Strategy, this working paper explores some of the strategic choices faced in the conduct and commission of costing work undertaken in relation to responses to homelessness in the USA, Canada and the UK. We consider the economic arguments and research drawn upon by governments and advocacy groups to propose or justify shifts in focus from crisis to more preventive strategies, and from temporary to more permanent 'solutions' to homelessness. The paper discusses the policy and advocacy environment in which economic arguments for reform have been shaped and indicates the social and research infrastructure drawn on by researchers in the three countries. Studies that have been prominent in recent policy debate at the national level have been singled out for more detailed discussion in the attached Appendix. Our investigation provides a basis for identifying the strategic purposes of costing work in homelessness policy debate as well as drawing attention to the infrastructure of research and advocacy required to drive it in productive directions.
- Publication type
- Working paper
- Research centre
- Swinburne University of Technology. Faculty of Life and Social Sciences. Institute for Social Research
- Publication year
- 2006
- Keyword(s)
- Advocacy; Canada; Homeless; Policy; United Kingdom; United States
- Publisher
- Swinburne University of Technology, Institute for Social Research
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2006 Sarah Pinkney and Scott Ewing.
- Full text


