Title: Youth Homelessness in the Cotswolds
1National Homelessness Conference 9th - 10th
November 2007
2What is Homelessness? A study of Young Peoples
Understanding of their Risk of Homelessness
- Dr Joan Smith and Dr Megan Ravenhill
- Centre for Housing and Community Research
- Cities Institute
- London Metropolitan University
- Contact joan.smith_at_londonmet.ac.uk
3The Family Background of Young Homeless People
- Pre 1997 young people were blamed for leaving
home - Between one sixth and one third of young people
in any homeless hostel had a background in LA
care but what of the two-thirds? - An in-depth study undertaken by CHCR (Family
Background of Young Homeless People, JRF, 1998)
interviewed 56 young people who became homeless
from the family home, not care, and also
interviewed at least one parent in half of all
cases. - One third of young people were homeless from
non-disrupted homes, largely because of their own
behaviour, but two-thirds were homeless from
disrupted homes largely through parental
behaviour. - The study interviewed 60 families from local
estates where young people were still living at
home. A majority of these parents supported the
reasons that parents of homeless young people
made them homeless by asking them to leave. - The study identified a Circle of Risk for young
people.
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5Identifying young people at risk of homelessness
- Taking Risks (Breugel and Smith, 1999). The first
quantitative study of risk was undertaken for
Safe in the City. 200 interviews of young
people aged 16-19 years from London living in
London hostels a matched sample of 150 yp living
at home on estates - Produced two risk indices a) risk by individual
- their biographical risks from interviews
b) risk by area postcodes of last family home - The odds ratios gained by comparing the
homeless and local samples created an index of
risk. - Led to the gate-keeping tool of 5 risk factors
for the Safe in the City programme. SinC
programme worked in 8 London boroughs with 700 yp
most at risk of homelessness. Programmes had 3
dimensions personal development, employment and
education, and work with parents. - Studies in Birmingham, Cotswolds and North
Staffordshire found the same factors.
6Risks for individual young people in London
7Risks by area for the young person
- Different societies carry different risks of
poverty, of street violence, of rates of
imprisonment, of deprivation. - In London the postcode of each of the 200 young
people last lived with their family were used to
identify the borough ward they lived in. - The borough probability of generating youth
homelessness correlated with male registered
unemployment at .9149 and the average index of
deprivation for the borough at .7743 - Young people are also at risk from moral order
judgements. Do other parents believe that parents
have the right to throw out young people who are
arguing with them, or on drugs? - How are young people labelled?
- QUESTION What understandings do young people
have of their own risk of homelessness?
8What is Homelessness?
- The What is Homelessness? research project
AIMED to find out young peoples perceptions of,
understandings of, and experience of - Home, homelessness and leaving home
- Running away and staying away
- And to discuss their ideas about
- Preventing runaways behaviour and youth
homelessness - METHOD
- 30 group interviews with young people (200 plus)
in four London boroughs out of school projects,
in school, and PRUs - 10 group interviews with parents in four London
boroughs - Then these ideas were tested through
- 22 individual interviews with young people who
have run away and, where possible, with their
parents/carers. - Findings were discussed with practitioners and
youth educators
9What is home? What does home mean to you?
- Young People
- Home was defined in terms of feelings
- Acceptance, wanted, safe, loved, respected, where
you belong - Activities
- Where you eat and sleep, where you socialise,
where you can have safe arguments - People
- Where your family is, where you can trust people
- Parents defined home as
- A safe, stable place for you and your children.
- They were surprised that young people agreed with
them. They thought young people saw it as bed
and breakfast and a place for them to have their
own space.
10Who is homeless?
- Young people and Parents
- Defined homelessness in terms of
- Levels of safety
- Degree of permanence
- Whether or not a young person could return home.
- Most young people would not recognise themselves
as homeless - Living with a grandparent or close family even
if they slept on the floor or sofa. - Living with a friend and were wanted there.
- Half of young people thought that a young person
who felt threatened, unsafe or unwanted either in
the parental home or a friends or relatives
home was not homeless. - Most parents did not recognise staying with
family members or friends of the parent as
homelessness but a young person staying with
their own friends would be homeless.
11 Leaving Home
- Young people thought they would need to
- Save 1000 to 2000 in order to set up home,
- Earn between 300 and 2000 a week to cover rent,
and cost of living - Jobs where 16 year olds could earn 1000 a week
Teacher, nursery nurse, builder, taxi driver,
shop assistant, plumber,drug dealer. - At 16 a young person would receive 50 to 100 a
week in benefits, and get a 1-bedroom flat from
the council. Rent of a 1 bed flat was between
50-500 - About half the young people knew where their
local housing office was and half where their
local social services office was. - Parents thought this showed how unrealistic
young people were. They wanted the cost of living
taught in schools and careers advice that
included wages, qualifications needed and costs
in London.
12 Avoiding leaving home due to family disputes
- Young People wanted
- Access to mediation between them and their
parents - To know their options if they could not stay at
home and have explained the consequences of
choosing each option - To be able to talk through their options with
someone they trusted. - To take their time, make their own decision and
be supported when they did - To be able to go back and try again if they made
the wrong decision - Parents would
- Sacrifice themselves (sleep in the living room,
turn downstairs room into a bedroom) or allow
respite stays with relatives.
13 Reasons for family disputes and leaving home
- Young people
- The main reasons for family disputes and leaving
home - Family pressure
- Young persons behaviour
- Abuse.
- Parents
- Saw peer pressure as a large contributory factor
in family disputes leading to young people
running away - or staying away from home.
14Communication between young people and parents
- Young people
- Communication problems were linked to problems
of mutual respect and young peoples attitudes . - They felt cut off and remote from their parents,
and often unable to talk to them. They
described feeling locked down, unable to
discuss things that worried them, except with a
very close friend. - Young people reported bullying in the
neighbourhood as well as at school. They felt
not at home if it was unsafe or intimidating. - They wanted to know that if they had a problem
they could talk to their parents - Young people wanted me time, when their parent
spent time just with them. - Arguments at home are necessary, they are safe
arguments. -
15Parents perspectives on communication
- Parents thought problems of communication were
- Young peoples attitude, unwillingness to listen
or continuous flouting of house rules. - Feeling cut out by their children, unheard and
torn between letting them learn from their
mistakes and protecting them from perceived
dangers. - Seeing that their child was locked down, but
feeling powerless to break in, instead waiting,
hoping that the young person would open up to
them if they backed off - Parents wanted equal rights with their children.
Young people quoted their rights to their
parents. Parents felt they had no rights. - Parents felt bullied by school policies aimed at
their child and them. - Parents feared their neighbourhood and would not
go out after dark. They feared for their childs
safety.
16Safe Arguments and Respect
- For young people safe arguments are important.
- A sign of being loved
- A sign of healthy relationships
- A negotiation of boundaries
- A safety valve
- Parents saw things differently. Parents saw
arguments as a lack of respect, stressful,
dangerous, hurtful, treading on egg shells. - Young people wanted to be respected by their
families. - To be heard is to be respected. Feeling safe and
secure within the family and home is to be
respected - Parents wanted young people to respect themselves
this would keep them safe. They wanted their
young people to respect them and thought it came
from their early relationship with their child.
17Running away or Running To
- Running away meant
- Leaving without telling the parent where they
were. Its aim was - To make parents realise something is wrong,
- To make an angry statement,
- To provoke a reaction from their parent,
- To avoid tensions in the home
- To avoid being punished.
- Running to meant
- Staying with a friend or relative with their
parents knowledge. This was often negotiated,
parents or young people could make the
arrangements. Its aim was - To give both parent and child space
- To act as a safety valve
- To protect the relationship from being totally
destroyed
18Running away or being kicked out
- Young people reported that being kicked out -
fell into two categories, - Irreparable damage to the relationship no going
back - Idle threats where the young person was thrown
out for an hour or so while everyone cooled down - Young people thought behaviour bad enough to be
kicked out was - Drugs,
- Drink
- Crime
- Anything that repeatedly brought trouble to the
door
19Young peoples advice to those being icked out
- Young peoples advice
- Try and return home avoid leaving permanently.
- Try and find somewhere to stay for a few nights
- Get someone else to mediate -
- A member of their family
- A friend of their parent
- Their own friends parent
- If the unofficial routes fail
- Look on the internet
- Go to the housing department or social services
- Talk to a trusted teacher or other people at
school (eg. Connexions) - Contact organizations such as Childline or the
NSPCC.
20Talking to runaways
- Runaways is a term recognised by young people,
missing is not. - We interviewed young people who had runaway in
two types of location local projects and
pan-London projects. The range of experience is
huge. - Local projects Young people ranged from those
running away for respite - from problems in their
school and/or neighbourhood but not their family,
to those running away principally from their
families. A quarter were permanently re-housed
away from their family because of abuse or
neglect. In three-quarters early intervention
could have helped. - Pan-London projects Young people were running
from their family, or had been kicked out from
their family. Only a quarter expressed any wish
to be reconciled with their family, or to go back
home. Almost all required, or had required, a
service intervention from Social Services at an
earlier stage.
21 Runaways in their local area
- Local runaways were seeking what the young people
in groups described respite, notice of their
problems, proof they were loved. - Some ran for a day, for a week, others stayed
away for months - Some moved in with relatives and let their
parents know then they were staying away. - Many had experienced traumatic life events
including death of a mother, disappearance of a
father, transfer of country orarea, childhood
illness, parental addiction or criminal activity.
- In the case of parental addiction or criminal
activity young people could decide to hide their
parents activity, or seek help. - Their local agencies were important to them.
There they found a trusted adult from whom they
accepted counselling and advice. - Young people were active in protecting themselves
from homelessness. Using mobile phones to book
rooms.
22Runaways in Pan-London projects
- All the young people interviewed in the
pan-London projects were seeking a service
response. - A range of problems from the unendurable (extreme
physical abuse, threats to life, neglect) to
family problems from which they needed long-term
respite. - Purpose in running away was different from the
majority of the local runaways they wanted to
protect themselves and to trigger a service
response. Most wanted to go to care. - Young peoples problems had either begun at an
early age (primary school) or physical violence
had begun at age 11 or 12 years. - Physical violence from their mother in many
cases. Social Services frequently believed the
mother. - Social services avoiding taking responsibility
for teenagers.
23Understanding running away
24 Conclusions from seminars with practitioners
and youth
- Youth work has been undervalued. Older young
people need places. - Local voluntary agencies need support to work
with the families of young people. Extended
schools will not capture everybody. - Curriculum change needs to begin in primary
school to capture those who leave school at 11 or
drop out - Peer education and peer mentoring are very
important when young people are locked down they
often turn to an older friend - Pastoral care in schools needs to be
re-established as a top priority. The Target
culture has damaged support for the most troubled
young people. Extended schools will be
encouraged to do this. - Parenting programmes need to be provided for all
parents, with their consent, not imposed on the
bad parents. - Pan London funding for Social Services work
with runaways
25Policy Proposals
- Citizenship curriculum to include real costs of
leaving home primary school top year - Support for non-judgemental local services
working with young people and parents. SinC type
programmes - Non-judgemental parenting programmes in extended
schools - Expanding school anti-bullying programmes into
one to one mediation training. - Website for advice on problems at home and
leaving home. Keywords need to be channelled to
the website. - Funding mobile phone contact, Keeping the Lines
Open - Funding early intervention and Social Service
intervention with young runaways from Pan-London
funds
26National Homelessness Conference 9th - 10th
November 2007