Foreword
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. Street-Involved Youth Talk: The Risky Business Study
3. Contribution and Complications of Instability in the Lives of
Street-Involved Youth
4. Self-Focus: Leaving Home and Becoming Street-Involved
5. Self-Focus: Adjusting to the Streert
6. Possibilities: Anticipating the Future
7. NFA (No fixed address): Feeling--and Being--In Between
8. Identity:"Not Being Who I Want To Be"
9. The Implications for Policy and Practice
Index
Doug Magnuson is Professor at the University of Victoria, Canada in
the School of Child and Youth Care. He studies professional
practice in various different contexts, including child welfare,
street-involved youth, group care, and youthwork in higher
education. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in data
analysis and research methods.
Mikael Jansson is a Scientist at the Canadian Institute for
Substance Use Research (CISUR). His current research uses a
combination of qualitative and quantitative approaches to
understand the lives of vulnerable populations, and he has a
particular interest in panel data. He has lead research teams
focused on youth, young adults, and workers in low-prestige
occupations.
Cecilia Benoit is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of
Sociology at the University of Victoria and Scientist at the
Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research. Her research
examines the multiple dimensions of health inequities embedded in
laws, policies, programs, and research agendas and searches for
evidence-based solutions to these systemic problems.
Based on a groundbreaking study of 64 street-involved youth
followed for 10 years, this book explores their diverse paths, and
provides a refreshing, hopeful perspective on their prospects for
successful transitions to adulthood. Woven into their stories are
clear directions for practices and policies that can assist
street-involved youth to achieve stable and engaged futures.
*Nancy L. Galambos, Professor of Psychology, University of
Alberta*
Magnuson, Jansson, and Benoit draw upon data from a truly
remarkable study to describe the complex and nuanced trajectories
of these highly marginalized young people--from compassionately
framed individual narratives to systems-level analyses. This
thorough, theoretically-grounded analysis of the wicked problem of
youth homelessness will be of great interest to a wide audience
exploring this topic and an asset in any course focusing on
poverty, youth, and social inequities.
*Sean A. Kidd, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, University of
Toronto*
Magnuson, Jansson, and Benoit present a compelling longitudinal
analysis of the ways in which street entrenched young people
navigate, negotiate, and survive within a backdrop of social and
economic inequities. The work is an important commentary on modern
day emerging adulthood and notions of identity, agency, stability,
relationships, hope, resilience, and independence.
*Jeff Karabanow, Professor and Associate Director, School of Social
Work, Dalhousie University*
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