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“Hidden Homelessness in Greater Vancouver”

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Date

2006

Authors

Fiedler, Rob
Schuurman, Nadine
Hyndman, Jennifer

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

While homelessness is a growing problem in Greater Vancouver, immigrants are not yet a visible part of the region's homeless. The over-representation of immigrants among the population considered at-risk suggests that immigrant homelessness remains hidden. Using census-based housing indicators, we examine the geographies of immigrants at-risk of homelessness to discern where 'hidden' homelessness might be occurring. Findings indicate that: spatial concentrations of recent immigrants at-risk of homelessness are found in inner suburban locations; in these at-risk areas the vast majority of immigrants are recent arrivals; and recent immigrants are disproportionately excluded from at-risk estimates because they are significantly over-represented among households that have shelter costs that exceed their incomes (which are excluded by the indicator). These conclusions are reached through analysis at the regional and sub-regional scale, which revealed broad trends and patterns, and a second small-area (neighbourhood) scale analysis, a means of better documenting the highly-localized geography of low-cost rental housing, revealing fine-grained patterns of social difference, that in Greater Vancouver identify areas where 'hidden' homelessness may be present.

Description

Keywords

Housing need, homelessness, immigration and housing, GIS, Greater Vancouver, Canada

Citation

Fiedler, Rob, Nadine Schuurman, and Jennifer Hyndman, “Hidden Homelessness in Greater Vancouver,� Cities 23.3 (2006): 205-216.