Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Policy Polit Nurs Pract. 2023 Aug;24(3):178-186. doi: 10.1177/15271544231176255. Epub 2023 Jun 2.
Criminalizing homelessness is ineffective, costly, and immoral; yet it remains a dominant feature in the management of this global social issue. There has been little analysis investigating why punitive homeless policies have remained popular despite their ineffectiveness. In applying Bacchi's What's the Problem Represented to Be (WPR) framework to a Canadian encampment bylaw, our analysis demonstrated that public policies criminalizing homelessness continue to prevail because homelessness is fundamentally understood as a problem of deviant, criminal individual behavior. We argue that reframing understandings of homelessness from one of criminality to a human rights issue gives way to more dignified, just, and effective solutions, such as the Housing First Model. We suggest that community health nurses can serve a key role in disrupting these criminalizing discourses across domains of policy, research, and practice by advocating for holistic, rights-based, and equity-oriented policy solutions related to homelessness.
将无家可归行为定罪不仅无效、代价高昂且不道德,但它仍然是全球社会问题管理中的一个主要特征。尽管惩罚性无家可归政策无效,但很少有分析研究调查为什么这些政策仍然如此受欢迎。通过将 Bacchi 的“问题被代表为什么样的问题”(WPR)框架应用于加拿大营地法规,我们的分析表明,将无家可归行为定罪的公共政策继续占主导地位,因为无家可归从根本上被理解为一种反常的、犯罪的个人行为的问题。我们认为,将无家可归问题的理解从犯罪问题重新定义为一个人权问题,为更有尊严、公正和有效的解决方案提供了途径,例如“先住后付”模式。我们建议,社区健康护士可以在政策、研究和实践领域通过倡导与无家可归问题相关的整体、基于权利和公平导向的政策解决方案,在打破这些将无家可归行为定罪的话语方面发挥关键作用。