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Homeless children sleeping in New York City, 1890. Photographed by Jacob Riis.. Youth homelessness is the problem of homelessness or housing insecurity amongst young people around the globe, extending beyond the absence of physical housing in most definitions and capturing familial instability, poor housing conditions, or future uncertainty (couch surfing, van living, hotels).
States with higher scores tend to have comprehensive plans to end homelessness, entities dedicated to youth homelessness, and laws that protect the rights and dignity of homeless youth. The index has noted an improvement in state scores over time, indicating a growing awareness and response to the issue of youth homelessness. [7] [1] [6]
Homeless youth in the United States who identify as LGBTQ are more likely to be victims of crime than heterosexual homeless youth. [6] For example, a 2002 study using structured interviews of homeless youth in the Seattle area found that male LGBTQ youth were more often sexually victimized while homeless than non-LGBTQ male youth. [26]
Barbara Duffield -- a policy director at the National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth -- believes that the number of homeless college students has increased over the ...
A recent study found homeless queer youth had been sexually assaulted at three times the rate of non-LGBTQ+ homeless youth, and almost half of queer youth reported sexual abuse by an adult ...
Youth experiencing homelessness have dreams, too, but they often lack the essential support, opportunity and guidance to achieve them. In Sacramento County, homelessness has increased by 67% since ...
In a 2022 book titled "Homelessness is a Housing Problem", Clayton Page Aldern, a policy analyst and data scientist in Seattle, and Gregg Colburn, an assistant professor of real estate at the University of Washington's College of Built Environments, studied homelessness rates across the country, along with what possible factors might be ...
Homeless youth are often called street kids, or urchins; the definition of street children is contested, but many practitioners and policymakers use UNICEF's concept of boys and girls, aged under 18 years, for whom "the street" (including unoccupied dwellings and wasteland) has become home and/or their source of livelihood, and who are ...