Our daily news is overflowing with stories about the breadth of the housing crisis, and governments are responding with new measures and funding, but these actions are based in a system that wasn’t designed to handle a problem this massive, or this complicated. This partially explains why nothing we’ve tried so far has had the impact we’ve wanted, so do we truly understand homelessness on a systemic level?


For too long, homelessness and poverty has been phrased as personal choices or, more likely, personal failings: You didn’t pull yourself up by your bootstraps hard enough, or you’re spending too much money on specialty iced coffee and avocado toast. We know that’s bunk, because in the last 30 years there's been massive changes in the economy, wealth redistribution, social services, and downloading from upper levels of government. It takes a system to make someone homeless.


At the Health and Housing Symposium in April, Dr. Erin Dej talked about her definition of homelessness, and systemic and structural causes of homelessness. Dr. Dej is an associate professor in the Department of Criminology at Wilfrid Laurier University, and a postdoctoral fellowship with the Canadian Observatory on Homelessness at York University, and as a "critical criminologist" she's dedicated her career to better understanding how people end up homeless in Canada.


So on this week’s edition of the podcast we will dive deeper with Dr. Dej on some of the issues she raised in her talk at the Symposium. We will discuss why it’s so hard to find housing solutions, the difficulty overcoming jurisdictional barriers, and the limitations in having individual municipalities being incubators for housing solutions. We will also talk about the ongoing fight against stigma, the new fight against “compassion fatigue”, and what could we do if we rebuilt the system from scratch.


So let's get smarter understanding homelessness on this week's Guelph Politicast!


If you want to see Dr. Dej’s scholarly work, you can find links to her academic papers on Google Scholar, but for something a little more accessible, you can check out her recent appearance at Waterloo Region Community Town Halls. You can also check out the coverage from day three of the Health and Housing Symposium here on the Guelph Politico.


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