Living on the Streets in Japan
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Homelessness has been recognized as a serious problem in Japan since the 1990s, but the dominant model of a "homeless person" has been that of an unemployed male laborer - a model that has largely excluded women, who experience homelessness in different forms. This study gives the homeless women of Japan a voice at last. Based on extensive fieldwork, the author paints a vivid picture of the unique experiences of homeless women living in a diverse range of environments. By introducing a gender perspective to the analytic framework and challenging the conception of the homeless individual as a rational, autonomous subject, the author invites a critical reconsideration of homeless studies and of public policy.
About Editors and Authors
MARUYAMA Satomi is Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Letters of Kyoto University. Her research interests include poverty research, gender theory and welfare sociology. Her research is based on fieldwork conducted with homeless females to analyze the relationship between poverty and gender.
Table of contents
Figures
Tables
Photos
Foreword to the English-Language Edition
Foreword to the Original Edition
1 Toward an ethnography of homeless women
2 Who are the homeless women?
3 Establishing welfare for homeless women
4 Gender norms and the use of welfare facilities
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Figures
Tables
Photos
Foreword to the English-Language Edition
Foreword to the Original Edition
1 Toward an ethnography of homeless women
2 Who are the homeless women?
3 Establishing welfare for homeless women
4 Gender norms and the use of welfare facilities
5 The world of women who sleep rough
6 Continuing and ending rough sleeping
7 The process of change
8 Resisting the spell of the autonomous subject
Epilogue
Afterword
Notes
References
Name Index
Subject Index
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