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Ingrid Sahlin

Professor emerita

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Who's Homeless and Whose Homeless?

Författare

  • Ingrid Sahlin

Summary, in English

What does the persistent construction of ‘the homeless’ and the revitalised term ‘our homeless’ include, imply, and ex- clude in Swedish political debate? And how is it politically and morally related to other houseless groups in the country? These questions are approached through an analysis of minutes from the Swedish Parliament 2015–2019. Inspired by Simmel’s (1908/1965) definition of ‘the poor’ as those who get (or would get) public assistance as poor, I claim that in Swedish political discourse, ‘(our) homeless’ comprise only those to whom the society acknowledges a responsibility to give shelter, thereby excluding the tens of thousands of people without homes that are temporarily accommodated by other authorities, private providers or individuals—or not at all. Although official definitions are housing-related, migrants without homes tend to be defined outside the ‘homeless’ concept, as well as from the municipalities’ responsibilities. I will argue that the reasons for this are institutional: regulations and their interpretation, coupled with traditions to care for only ‘our’ people which, in turn, are fortified by current nationalist sentiments.

Avdelning/ar

  • Socialhögskolan

Publiceringsår

2020-07-31

Språk

Engelska

Sidor

43-53

Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie

Social Inclusion

Volym

8

Issue

3

Dokumenttyp

Artikel i tidskrift

Förlag

Cogitatio

Ämne

  • Social Work

Nyckelord

  • discursive exclusion
  • homeless definitions
  • houseless migrants
  • nationalist discourse
  • discursive exclusion
  • homeless definitions
  • houseless migrants
  • nationalist discourse
  • Sweden

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt

  • ISSN: 2183-2803