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'We have a roof over our head, but we have to eat too': Tracing the impact of shifting foodsapes on health and wellbeing from homelessness to supportive housing

机译:“我们头顶上有一个屋顶,但我们也必须吃饭”:追踪从食品无粮到无家可归到支持性住房对健康和福祉的影响

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摘要

Background: People facing extended periods of homelessness, whose daily routines are often highly structured around securing basic necessities, exhibit a remarkable degree of agency and resilience procuring food. Within this geography if food acquisition, what happens in and along the way also becomes deeply embedded in complex social and spatial processes -- or foodscapes. Purpose: By exploring people's shifting foodscapes during the transition from homelessness into permanent housing, this study aims to shed light on how daily activities involving food can impact a person's sense of health and wellbeing. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with ten people enrolled in scattered-site independent and congregate living arrangements in Kingston, Ontario between November 2016 and March 2017. Observational research was also executed at eleven local charitable food providers. Data was coded using low inference, line-by-line coding and analyzed using through a constant comparative method. Results: The findings of this exploratory study indicate that people are now able to store, prepare, and consume food at home. This increased ability to eat when, where, and to a certain extent what they want has had a positive impact on their overall sense of health and wellbeing. However, other effective makers of wellbeing that are enacted along people's everyday routines and activities within an urban landscape, such as the social and spatial process underpinning the act of acquiring and consuming food, remain largely unaddressed within the intervention. Furthermore, re-investment in ending homelessness continues to rely on the status quo system of insufficient, inadequate, and undignified charitable stop gaps as a solution to hunger. Implications: Understanding this contested and contradictory geography of food is critical to support people during the transition from homelessness into housing. The process of housing participants without addressing food simply creates new circuits of dependence and marginalization that continue to inadequately meet people's basic needs in a dignified way.
机译:背景:面临长期无家可归的人们,其日常工作通常围绕确保基本必需品而高度结构化,他们在采购食物方面表现出显着的代理能力和应变能力。在这个地理区域内,如果要获取食物,沿途和沿途发生的事情也将深深地嵌入到复杂的社会和空间过程(或食物景象)中。目的:通过研究人们从无家可归到永久居住的过渡过程中人们的饮食环境变化,本研究旨在阐明涉及食物的日常活动如何影响人们的健康和幸福感。方法:在2016年11月至2017年3月之间,对十名参加安大略省金斯敦零星独立和集体生活安排的人进行了半结构化访谈。还对11家当地慈善食品提供者进行了观察性研究。使用低推理,逐行编码对数据进行编码,并通过恒定比较方法进行分析。结果:这项探索性研究的结果表明,人们现在可以在家中存储,准备和食用食物。他们在何时,何地以及在某种程度上需要的进食能力的提高,对他们的整体健康和福祉产生了积极影响。但是,在人们的日常活动和城市景观活动中制定的其他有效的福祉创造者(如支撑获取和消费食物行为的社会和空间过程)在干预措施中仍未得到解决。此外,为结束无家可归而进行的再投资继续依靠不足,不足和不尊严的慈善停止缺口的现状系统来解决饥饿问题。启示:了解这种有争议和矛盾的食品地理环境对于在从无家可归到住房的过渡过程中为人们提供支持至关重要。在没有解决食物问题的情况下安置参与者的过程只会造成依赖和边缘化的新循环,继续以有尊严的方式无法充分满足人们的基本需求。

著录项

  • 作者

    Hainstock, Madison jewell.;

  • 作者单位

    Queen's University (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 Queen's University (Canada).;
  • 学科 Public health.;Social research.
  • 学位 M.S.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 134 p.
  • 总页数 134
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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