This book explores the housing process through the in the field perspective of social service workers, documenting in illuminating detail the structural barriers workers encounter, as well as the creative methods they employ to circumvent regulations in order to assertively advocate for and support their clients.
Drawing on his in-depth, ethnographic fieldwork and his own professional experiences as an advocate for the down-but-not-out, Curtis Smith illuminates the perspective and street-level grind of social service workers to negotiate the maze of bureaucratic red-tape and polices to house their homeless clients. In doing so, Smith's Homelessness and Housing Advocacy: The Role of Red-Tape Warriors is a most welcome and compelling addition to the social science research and literature on homelessness, particularly on the dogged and resourceful efforts of those "street-level bureaucrats" advocating on behalf of the homeless. - David A. Snow, University of California, Irvine
In Homelessness and Housing Advocacy, Curtis Smith covers a wide variety of topics centered on social service provision to those who are homeless. Readers learn about the characteristics of housing policy, how specific social services for homeless people are organized, and the diverse characteristics and experiences of people who request housing services. Discussions of such topics offer context for the primary interest in the work of front-line service workers in these agencies where Smith goes inside the messy world of social science provision and demonstrates how workers are creative practical actors. Rich ethnographic detail coupled with Smith's personal experience combine to artfully demonstrate how front-line social service workers develop practical understandings and skills to deliver services within environments posing multiple challenges. - Donileen R. Loseke, University of South Florida
With precision and care, Curtis Smith documents the everyday tyranny of government bureaucracy in its attempts to regulate both unhoused populations and the social service providers charged with "ending homelessness." But Smith also reminds us that even in overwhelming conditions of austerity, constantly changing funding criteria, and the ever-present threat of police violence, the state's efforts to control are always incomplete. Together, the social workers and clients of Smith's study persistently navigate current service systems to secure health, safety, and survival. Paying particular attention to the creativity of social workers as they interpret, bend, and even break the rules, Homelessness and Housing Advocacy points toward a re-politicization of service provision in service of a better world in which no one is deprived of housing. - Craig Willse, Prescott College
In Homelessness and Housing Advocacy, Curtis Smith covers a wide variety of topics centered on social service provision to those who are homeless. Readers learn about the characteristics of housing policy, how specific social services for homeless people are organized, and the diverse characteristics and experiences of people who request housing services. Discussions of such topics offer context for the primary interest in the work of front-line service workers in these agencies where Smith goes inside the messy world of social science provision and demonstrates how workers are creative practical actors. Rich ethnographic detail coupled with Smith's personal experience combine to artfully demonstrate how front-line social service workers develop practical understandings and skills to deliver services within environments posing multiple challenges. - Donileen R. Loseke, University of South Florida
With precision and care, Curtis Smith documents the everyday tyranny of government bureaucracy in its attempts to regulate both unhoused populations and the social service providers charged with "ending homelessness." But Smith also reminds us that even in overwhelming conditions of austerity, constantly changing funding criteria, and the ever-present threat of police violence, the state's efforts to control are always incomplete. Together, the social workers and clients of Smith's study persistently navigate current service systems to secure health, safety, and survival. Paying particular attention to the creativity of social workers as they interpret, bend, and even break the rules, Homelessness and Housing Advocacy points toward a re-politicization of service provision in service of a better world in which no one is deprived of housing. - Craig Willse, Prescott College







