Homelessness and housing stress among police detainees: results from the DUMA program
Date
2015-02
Authors
Payne, Jason L.
McGregor, S.
McDonald, H.
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Australian Institute of Criminology
Abstract
The Australian Bureau of Statistics, using the 2011 Australian Census, has estimated
that on any given night in 2011, approximately 105,000 Australians were homeless (ABS
2012). The majority resided in either severely overcrowded residential dwellings (39%) or
in supported accommodation designed specifically for those without a permanent place
of residence (20%). Among them, young males, Indigenous Australians and those born
overseas were overrepresented. Yet despite all the information that has been collected,
there remains a significant gap in the national conversation about the causes, correlates and
more importantly the consequences of homelessness (including primary, secondary and
tertiary homelessness; see Homelessness Taskforce 2008) in the Australian context.The idea that a person’s living situation can influence their involvement in criminal activity
has long been acknowledged, with homelessness in particular having been the focus of
extensive theoretical and empirical criminological research (see Grimshaw 2002). Although
long recognised as an important indicator of social disadvantage, homelessness as a
cause of crime found renewed attention with the release of Hagan and Macarthy’s (1997)
detailed depiction of youth crime and homelessness in two Canadian cities. Titled Mean
Streets: Youth Crime and Homelessness, the authors examined qualitative and quantitative
data to explore the often difficult and challenging circumstances faced by homeless youth.
Their study lent significant support to the idea that homelessness, together with relative
deprivation and monetary dissatisfaction, is one of a number of ‘strains’ that can influence
individuals to engage in criminal activity (see also Agnew 2006).
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Keywords
homelessness, Indigenous Australian, born overseas, overcrowded residential dwelling, without a permanent place, primary homelessness, secondary homelessness, tertiary homelessness, cause, Australia, criminal activity, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Australian Census, disadvantage
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Trends and Issues in Crime and Criminal Justice
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Journal article
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