homelessness, racism, and social justice

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HOMELESSNESS, RACISM, and SOCIAL JUSTICE Jeff Olivet July 2015

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Page 1: HOMELESSNESS, RACISM, and SOCIAL JUSTICE

HOMELESSNESS, RACISM, and SOCIAL JUSTICE

Jeff OlivetJuly 2015

Page 2: HOMELESSNESS, RACISM, and SOCIAL JUSTICE

HOMELESSNESS IS NOT JUST ABOUT...

HousingHealthcareServices

Page 3: HOMELESSNESS, RACISM, and SOCIAL JUSTICE

HOMELESSNESS IS ALSO ABOUT...

InjusticeOppressionRacism

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It is an issue of

Justice, Equality, and What is Right

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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WHERE I GREW UP.

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PROGRESS? MOVING BACKWARDS?

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The Facts about Homelessness and Race

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POVERTY

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(Hopper, 1995)

“We should reintegrate discussions of homelessness with those of persistent poverty. And in these discussions, the issue of race is unavoidable.”

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(Urban Institute, 2013)

Racial Wealth/

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SHELTER USAGE

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ACCORDING TO HUD

60% of the sheltered homeless population are minorities.

Almost 40% are African American.

Minorities overall are about 1.5 times more likely to be in

the sheltered homeless population than in the total U.S

population, and African Americans are 3 times more likely.

(HUD, 2012)

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One study found that:Blacks were 16x more likely than whites to live in shelters.

AND

Black children under 5 were 29x more likely than white children to end up in shelters.

(Culhane & Metraux, 1999)

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(HUD, 2012)

Total US Population Shelter Population

White, non-Hispanic 64% White, non-Hispanic 40%

Hispanic 10.5%

Hispanic 9%

African American 12.5%

African American 38%

Other, one race 10.5% Other, one race 5.5%

Several races 2.7% Several races 7.9%

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“Since the 1980s, blacks have been overrepresented in the homeless population with respect to their share of the national populations and the poverty population.”

(Carter, 2011)

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(Carter, 2011)

National Population

Poverty Population

Homeless Population

12.8% 27% 41% total56% for families

Among African Americans...

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“The Latino Paradox”

(Gonzalez-Baker, 1996)

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RESIDENTIAL DISCRIMINATION

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“Listen here people, Listen to me.

Don’t try to find a home in

Washington DC cause it’s a

bourgeois town.”

Leadbelly “Bourgeois Blues”

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Homelessness can be seen as a symptom of structural racism.”

(Powell, 2003)

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Homelessness is tied to disparities in income and wealth, availability of housing and jobs, education level, and healthcare access

(Powell, 2003)

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Structural Causes

(Carter, 2011; Power, 2006)

• Poverty

• Increased demand for and decreased supply of affordable housing

• Housing discrimination & residential segregation

• Discrimination in employment and housing

• Lack of access to behavioral health care

• Racial bias in criminal justice

• White privilege

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INCARCERATION

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While people of color make up 30% of the US population,

they account for 60% of those imprisoned.

(Center for American Progress, 2012)

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1 in 3 black men can expect to go to prison in their lifetimes.

(Center for American Progress, 2012)

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The number of women incarcerated has

increased by 800% since 1980, and women of color are

3 times more likely than white women to be incarcerated.

(Center for American Progress, 2012)

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“We avoid talking about caste in our society because we are ashamed of our racial history.”

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A Historical Perspective

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Runaway slaves and free blacksAlmshousesCivil war work campsThe failure of reconstructionTramps and cowboys1927 Mississippi River flood A “permanent class of migrant workers”CriminalizationThe great migrationUrban renewal

(Johnson, 2011; Wilkerson, 2010)

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For 100 years, between 1870 and 1970, African Americans moved to the cities of the North and West.

Whites fled.

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“Social and racial inequities are geographically inscribed.”

(Powell, 2003)

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• How do racism and homelessness intersect in your community?

• What is your organization doing to fight it?

Racism in Our Communities

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• Is there racism in our programs?

• What does it look like?

• How can we change it?

Racism in Our Programs

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“Invisibility is not an accident, but a determined refusal not to see.

Dispelling invisibility...is not so much a matter of shedding light as it is one of choosing, deliberately, to look.”

(Hopper, 1996)

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What happens to a dream deferred?Does it dry up

like a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore--

And then run? Does it stink like rotten meat?

Or crust and sugar over-- like a syrupy sweet?Maybe it just sags like a heavy load.

Or does it explode?

A Dream Deferredby Langston Hughes

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We must work to bend the arc of the moral universe towards justice.

(Parker/King/Obama)

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Jeff Olivet [email protected] 617-467-6014 www.center4si.com

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ReferencesBarry,  J.  M.  (1998).  Rising  'de:  The  great  Mississippi  flood  of  1927  and  how  it  changed  America.  Simon  and  Schuster.  

Blackmon,  D.  A.  (2009).  Slavery  by  another  name:  The  re-­‐enslavement  of  black  Americans  from  the  Civil  War  to  World  War  II.  Anchor.  

Carter  III,  G.  R.  (2011).  From  exclusion  to  desGtuGon:  Race,  affordable  housing,  and  homelessness.  Cityscape,  33-­‐70.  

Cortes,  A.,  Leopold,  J.,  Rothschild,  L.,  Buron,  L.,  Khadduri,  J.,  &  Culhane,  D.  P.  (2011).  The  2010  annual  homeless  assessment  report  to  Congress.  

Culhane,  Dennis  P.  &  Stephen  Metraux  (1999).  "Assessing  RelaGve  Risk  for  Homeless  Shelter  Usage  in  New  York  City  and  Philadelphia."  Popula'on  Research  and  Policy  Review  18(3):  219-­‐236.  

Ellio_,  M.,  &  Krivo,  L.  J.  (1991).  Structural  determinants  of  homelessness  in  the  United  States.  Soc.  Probs.,  38,  113.  

Hopper,  K.  (1995).  Taking  the  measure  of  homelessness:  recent  research  on  scale  and  race.  Clearinghouse  Review,  Nov-­‐Dec  1995:  730-­‐739.  

Hopper,  K.  (1996).  Homelessness  among  african-­‐americans:  a  historical  and  contemporary  perspecGve.  In  Homelessness  in  America,  ed.  J.  Baumohl.  Oryx  Press.  

McKernan,  S.,  Ratcliffe,  C.,  Steuerle,  E.,  &  Zhang,  S.  (2013).  Less  than  equal:  racial  dispariGes  in  wealth  accumulaGon.  Urban  InsGtute.  

Nunez,  R.  (2012,  March).    InsGtute  for  Children,  Poverty,  &  Homelessness.  Retrieved  from  h_p://www.icphusa.org/index.asp?page=21&news=11  

Powell,  J.A.  (2003).  Race  and  Homelessness  [PowerPoint  slides].  Retrieved  from  h_p://www.kirwanins'tute.osu.edu/presenta'ons/2003_09_29homelessness.ppt  

Power,  S.  (2006).  The  Color  of  Homelessness:  Why  Persons  of  Color  Are  Overrepresented  Among  Emergency  Shelter  and  Transi'onal  Housing  Users  in  King  County  &  What  the  CommiVee  to  End  Homelessness  in  King  County  Can  Do  To  Reduce  This  Problem.  (Unpublished  dissertaGon).  University  of  Washington,  Sea_le,  Washington.  

Shinn,  M.,  &  Gillespie,  C.  (1994).  The  roles  of  housing  and  poverty  in  the  origins  of  homelessness.  American  Behavioral  Scien'st.  

The  NaGonal  Center  on  Family  Homelessness.  (2009).  State  Report  Card  on  Child  Homelessness.  Retrieved  from  h_p://www.homelesschildrenamerica.org/documents/rc_summary_004.pdf  

Wilkerson,  I.  (2010).  The  warmth  of  other  suns:  The  epic  story  of  America's  great  migra'on.  Random  House.

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