Physical residential needs to be part of solving homeless problems, but simply providing more housing can not solve homeless problems.
Therefore, in the latest approach, we integrate support other than residential and non-residential. Housing support may include assistance to overcome market barriers such as renting housing with assistance, renting real estate through head, granting rental assistance for a limited time, or searching shared homes.
In general, social service systems are difficult to find at the customer level and provide comprehensive customized support. Customers with complex needs, including homelessness, can have difficulty gaining the necessary assistance to overcome independence. Especially, the reaction of homeless people is not uniform because of complicated problems and influence on population groups such as indigenous peoples.
I began a homeless in Canada. In 2014, we asked a question. What investment is needed to purchase an affordable housing in Canada to solve the homeless problem? It is not the most direct proposal, but the complexity involved in evaluating the economics of affordable housing across Canada and the extent to which various levels of government have ambiguous responsibility for determining solutions recognizing. In Chapter 2 of this report, we reviewed the progress and initiatives we have been working to resolve homeless, and recognized how far we have not been. Chapter 3 outlines affordable housing investment in Canada and incorporates them from the perspective of changing priorities and policies over the past few decades. In chapter 4 we will look into the relationship between homeless issues and affordable housing in detail.
It is important to treat Canadian homeless as a complicated problem. Most people do not choose homeless people. On the contrary, homelessness is caused by a social system that can not support and support people at risk of homelessness. Homeless Country of Canada (2013) points out that homeless is a result of systematic or social barriers, homeless is affordable appropriate housing, economics, psychology, cognition, behavior or lack of physical. Aspects of the challenge and / or the result of racial discrimination and discrimination "(4). In Canada homeless could lead to major changes in economic change, housing market, poverty alleviation.Homeless reasons, structure Reflects complex interactions between primary factors, system failures, and personal circumstances It is advisable to consider homeless as a result of the cumulative effect of various factors, not a single cause To do.
It is estimated that the number of people in Homeless in Canada has been the center of discussion for many years. The Homeless Partnership Secretariat (HPS) uses an estimated 150,000 to 300,000 people each year to experience homelessness in Canada, but supporters often use higher numbers. But in Canada there has never been a coordinated, coordinated or consistent effort to list homeless. Until recently, we rely on the evaluation of the stadium based on unreliable incomplete data