Home Finding Home: Policy Options for Addressing Homelessness in Canada 3. Children & Youth
- Finding Home: Policy Options for Addressing Homelessness in Canada
- 0. Introduction
- 1. Housing
- 1.1 Transitional Housing Models in Canada: Options and Outcomes
- 1.2 Shelters for the Homeless: Learning from Research
- 1.3 One in Five…Housing as a Factor in the Admission of Children to Care
- 1.4. The Toronto Shelter Zoning By-law: Municipal Limits in Addressing Homelessness
- 1.5 Toronto’s Streets to Homes Program
- 2. Health
- 2.1 The Relationship between Homelessness & Health: An Overview of Research in Canada
- 2.2 The Health of Toronto’s Homeless Population
- 2.3 Mental Health, Mental Illness, & Homelessness in Canada
- 2.4 The Health of Street Youth in Canada: A Review of the Literature
- 2.5 Understanding the Health, Housing; Social Inclusion of Formerly Homeless Older Adults
- 2.6 Traumatic Brain Injury in the Homeless Population: A Toronto Study
- 2.7 Primary Health Care for Homeless Persons: Evaluating the Options Using a Policy Analysis Approach
- 3. Children & Youth
- 3.1 Homeless Youth: The Need to Link Research & Policy
- 3.2 Whose Safety Counts? Street Youth, Social Exclusion, Criminal Victimization
- 3.3 Social Housing Policy for Homeless Canadian Youth
- 3.4 Street Survival: A Gendered Analysis of Youth Homelessness in Toronto
- 3.5 Social Stigma and Homeless Youth
- 3.6 How Young People Get off the Street: Exploring Paths Processes
- 3.7 The Peel Youth Village: Designing Transitional Housing for Homeless Suburban Youth
- 3.8 The “hand-to-mouth” existence of homeless youths in Toronto
- 4. Women
- 4.1 Supporting Young Homeless Mothers Who Have Lost Child Custody
- 4.2 Better Off in a Shelter? A Year of Homelessness Housing among Status Immigrant, Non-Status Migrant, Canadian-Born Families
- 4.3 Making the invisible visible: Canadian women, homelessness and health outside the “big city”
- 4.4. Rights to the City: Thinking Social Justice for Chronically Homeless Women
- 4.5 Pan-Territorial Report: A Study of Women’s Homelessness North of 60°
- 5. Immigrants & Refugees
- 5.1 Living on the Ragged Edges: Latin Americans and Muslims and the Experience of Homelessness in Toronto
- 5.2 Taking Care of Their Own? Or Falling Between the Cracks? Absolute Relative Homelessness Among Immigrants, Refugees, Refugee Claimants in Vancouver
- 5.3 At Risk in Canada’s Outer Suburbs: A Pilot Study of Immigrants and Homelessness in York Region
- 6. Aboriginal People
- 7. Justice
- 8. Research
- 9. Human Rights
Publication date2009