Women and Homelessness
> Abstract_ There has been a relative paucity of European research on women’s
homelessness since the European Observatory on Homelessness promoted
the first overall study on the subject in 2001. This chapter provides a critical
review of the research undertaken since then, focusing on the continuities and
consistencies found regarding the previous findings and exploring the developments
brought about by the new research produced. Given the almost total
absence of comparative European research on women’s homelessness, the
literature review is based on available national studies on the theme. Beginning
with the potential impact of recent developments in defining and measuring
homelessness in Europe on the (in)visibility of female homelessness, the
chapter examines the complexity of the hidden nature of women’s homelessness,
the material and immaterial challenges and constraints faced by
homeless families and the response strategies they adopt, the experiences of
homeless women as service users and their interactions with the welfare
system and its actors, as well as the importance of developing sound theoretical
frameworks for understanding women’s homelessness. Finally it identifies
the major gaps that persist in the research into this area and explores
some key questions for the development of the research and policy agenda.