In this ethnographic study, Johannes Lenhard observes the daily practices, routines and techniques of people who are sleeping rough on the streets of Paris. The book focusses on their survival practises, their short-term desires and hopes, how they earn money through begging, how they choose the best place to sleep at night and what role drugs and alcohol play in their lives. The book also follows people through different institutional settings, including a homeless day centre, a needle exchange, a centre for people with alcohol problems and a homeless shelter.
Tabela de Conteúdo
List of Figures
Preface: A Personal Down and Out in London and Paris
Acknowledgements
Part I: Introductions
Introduction: People Sleeping Rough at the Gare du Nord
Frame: Hoping for Home
Part II: Short-term Hopes – Surviving the Street
Chapter 1. Labour With, Off and On the Street
Chapter 2. Habiter: Making Shelter when Sleeping Rough
Chapter 3. Addiction Time: Cutting Through Time with Alcohol and Drugs
Part III: Towards the Future, Assisted
Chapter 4. Ruptures from Addiction Time: Institutional Support at Sun and EMO
Chapter 5. Between Relationships and the Projet de Vie: Social Work at Freedom
Chapter 6. Towards a Room of One’s Own: Living in ‘Ruly’ Temporary Accommodation
Conclusion: Better Lives on the Street
References
Index
Sobre o autor
Johannes Lenhard is the co-director of Venture ESG and affi liated lecturer at the University of Cambridge and the Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy.