journal article
LitStream Collection
2000 Housing, Care and Support
The homeless population is one of the most studied in the field of social exclusion. We know more than enough about the problem of homelessness and its associated demographics, but not enough about what to do. Crisis' new solutions research programme aims to encourage that new thinking, with proposals for a new national homelessness strategy and reports on prevention, the links between housing and support, innovative approaches to street crime, failing hostels and the threat of zero tolerance.
doi: 10.1108/14608790200000002
The homeless population is one of the most studied in the field of social exclusion. We know more than enough about the problem of homelessness and its associated demographics, but not enough about what to do. Crisis' new solutions research programme aims to encourage that new thinking, with proposals for a new national homelessness strategy and reports on prevention, the links between housing and support, innovative approaches to street crime, failing hostels and the threat of zero tolerance.
2000 Housing, Care and Support
doi: 10.1108/14608790200000003
This article takes up the issue of the relationship between Supporting People and neighbourhood renewal. It attempts a non‐partisan debate about how Supporting People can play a positive role in helping to achieve one of the Government's wider social policy objectives through community development.
2000 Housing, Care and Support
This article takes up the issue of the relationship between Supporting People and neighbourhood renewal. It attempts a non-partisan debate about how Supporting People can play a positive role in helping to achieve one of the Government's wider social policy objectives through community development.
2000 Housing, Care and Support
The flu ‘epidemic’ and the ‘shortage’ of beds within the NHS dominated the headlines in the first weeks of the twenty-first century. That this very twentieth-century issue should have reared its head so soon is perhaps unsurprising. However, it is disappointing that discussions about health should, yet again, be so focused on the provision of acute care.
2000 Housing, Care and Support
doi: 10.1108/14608790200000004
The flu ‘epidemic’ and the ‘shortage’ of beds within the NHS dominated the headlines in the first weeks of the twenty‐first century. That this very twentieth‐century issue should have reared its head so soon is perhaps unsurprising. However, it is disappointing that discussions about health should, yet again, be so focused on the provision of acute care.
2000 Housing, Care and Support
The transforming influence of care in the community, with its resulting mass of new legislation, has brought about change whose pace has been gathering momentum. The culmination of this process is evident in the Modernising Mental Health Services (Department of Health, 1999a) agenda, proposals to reform the Mental Health Act (Department of Health 1999b, 1999c, 1999d) and the Mental Health National Service Framework (Department of Health, 1999e). This article explores the challenges.
doi: 10.1108/14608790200000005
The transforming influence of care in the community, with its resulting mass of new legislation, has brought about change whose pace has been gathering momentum. The culmination of this process is evident in the Modernising Mental Health Services (Department of Health, 1999a) agenda, proposals to reform the Mental Health Act (Department of Health 1999b, 1999c, 1999d) and the Mental Health National Service Framework (Department of Health, 1999e). This article explores the challenges.
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