The Value of Homelessness: Managing Surplus Life in the United States

The Value of Homelessness: Managing Surplus Life in the United States

by Craig Willse
The Value of Homelessness: Managing Surplus Life in the United States

The Value of Homelessness: Managing Surplus Life in the United States

by Craig Willse

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Overview

It is all too easy to assume that social service programs respond to homelessness, seeking to prevent and understand it. The Value of Homelessness, however, argues that homelessness today is an effect of social services and sciences, which shape not only what counts as such but what will?or ultimately won’t?be done about it. 

Through a history of U.S. housing insecurity from the 1930s to the present, Craig Willse traces the emergence and consolidation of a homeless services industry. How to most efficiently allocate resources to control ongoing insecurity has become the goal, he shows, rather than how to eradicate the social, economic, and political bases of housing needs. Drawing on his own years of work in homeless advocacy and activist settings, as well as interviews conducted with program managers, counselors, and staff at homeless services organizations in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle, Willse provides the first analysis of how housing insecurity becomes organized as a governable social problem.

An unprecedented and powerful historical account of the development of contemporary ideas about homelessness and how to manage homelessness, The Value of Homelessness offers new ways for students and scholars of social work, urban inequality, racial capitalism, and political theory to comprehend the central role of homelessness in governance and economy today.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781452945286
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 09/15/2015
Series: Difference Incorporated
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 507 KB

About the Author

Craig Willse is assistant professor of cultural studies at George Mason University. He is coeditor of Beyond Biopolitics: Essays on the Governance of Life and Death.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Housing and Other Monsters
1. Surplus Life, or Race and Death in Neoliberal Times
2. Homelessness as Method: Social Science and the Racial Order
3. From Pathology to Population: Managing Homelessness in the United States
4. Governing through Numbers: HUD and the Databasing of Homelessness
5. The Invention of Chronic Homelessness
Conclusion: Surplus Life at the Limits of the Good
Notes
Index

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