Ping-pong housing: Women’s post-incarceration trajectories
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Smoyer, Amy B (Author)
- Keene, Danya E (Author)
- Oyola, M. (Author)
- Hampton, A (Author)
Title
Ping-pong housing: Women’s post-incarceration trajectories
Abstract
This study examines the post-incarceration housing experiences of 33 women. Using Residential Timeline Followback methodology, participants were asked to report where they lived at arrest and every location since their release. Follow-up questions asked women to describe these locations, who they lived with, how much they paid, and whether or not they felt safe. Demographic information and criminal justice history were recorded. The data paint a complicated picture of social and community resources, persistence, and struggle. Housing assets lost at incarceration were difficult to recover. Most women bounced between various locations, relying heavily on short-term subsidized congregate housing programs and rarely securing independent housing. Participants described the family, friends, and acquaintances who housed them during reentry as overextended and vulnerable. Implications for policy and practice are explored. © The Author(s) 2020.
Publication
Affilia
Publisher
SAGE Publications Inc
Date
2020
Volume
36
Issue
3
Pages
336–356
Journal Abbr
Affilia
Citation Key
smoyerPingpongHousingWomens2020
Accessed
8/27/20, 1:57 PM
ISSN
0886-1099
Language
en
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Extra
2 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
tex.ids: smoyerPingpongHousingWomen2020
tex.citation: https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopusid/85090556112
type: Article
Citation
Smoyer, A. B., Keene, D. E., Oyola, M., & Hampton, A. (2020). Ping-pong housing: Women’s post-incarceration trajectories. Affilia, 36(3), 336–356. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886109920954416
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