Built community: architecture, community, and participation in a permanent supportive housing project

IF 1.1 Q3 SOCIAL WORK
Tim Huffman
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

ABSTRACT Housing and the social processes that create it are an important part of a better world. The permanent supportive housing movement holds that housing, in addition to a variety of human services, is the most dignified and effective way to help people without homes. But the design of such initiatives matters. This community-based, qualitative research project investigates the connection between space, participation, and community. It draws on the experiences of residents of an innovative housing organization on Skid Row in Los Angeles, California. Residents of the program find community space to be both promising and contested. Their experiences also reveal the way that institutional space can be trauma-informed and impact their overall wellbeing and opportunities for interacting with others. However, their feelings of being a part of the community and their involvement in activities are not always connected, as identity and social context can cause residents to identify or dis-identify with their community despite how involved or uninvolved they are. Intentionally designed community spaces in permanent supportive housing units can respond to trauma and set the stage for interaction, but they cannot solve all problems.
建成社区:建筑、社区和参与永久性支持性住房项目
摘要住房和创造住房的社会进程是一个更美好世界的重要组成部分。永久性支持性住房运动认为,住房除了各种人类服务外,是帮助无家可归者的最有尊严和最有效的方式。但这些举措的设计很重要。这个以社区为基础的定性研究项目调查了空间、参与和社区之间的联系。它借鉴了加利福尼亚州洛杉矶Skid Row一家创新住房组织的居民的经验。该项目的居民发现社区空间既有希望,也有争议。他们的经历也揭示了机构空间如何被创伤告知,并影响他们的整体健康和与他人互动的机会。然而,他们作为社区一部分的感觉和他们对活动的参与并不总是联系在一起的,因为身份和社会背景可能会导致居民认同或不认同他们的社区,无论他们是如何参与或不参与。在永久性支持性住房单元中有意设计的社区空间可以应对创伤,并为互动创造条件,但它们不能解决所有问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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14.30%
发文量
40
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