Precarity, from all angles
Chaudin, Maxime
Precarity, from all angles - 2024.
86
What does it mean to be “homeless” today? What do homeless people feel about the social complex they find themselves in, whether they want to be or not? What is exclusion? It is the fault of the excluded or those excluding them? Is it possible to bridge the gap between sociology and what is known as political philosophy? With these questions in mind, we have combined theory with the harrowing realities we saw on the ground. We have tried to establish a link between the non-use of (social) rights and ostracism. We have attempted to establish a link between street culture and the culture of so-called normal people. We have looked at norms and stigma, integration into society, which builds, de-constructs, or rebuilds people integrating into society—society in the most generic sense of the term, in the sense of the nation-state as we understand it in the West. We have discussed the place of homeless people in our society; we have discussed employment in relation to the notion of homelessness; we have discussed the place of the social class of origin in relation to the social class of arrival. We have discussed community withdrawal, provided that a community exists. This article is not intended to be exhaustive, but simply to present a study by a group of students who carried out a serious study of the social problems faced by the homeless.
Precarity, from all angles - 2024.
86
What does it mean to be “homeless” today? What do homeless people feel about the social complex they find themselves in, whether they want to be or not? What is exclusion? It is the fault of the excluded or those excluding them? Is it possible to bridge the gap between sociology and what is known as political philosophy? With these questions in mind, we have combined theory with the harrowing realities we saw on the ground. We have tried to establish a link between the non-use of (social) rights and ostracism. We have attempted to establish a link between street culture and the culture of so-called normal people. We have looked at norms and stigma, integration into society, which builds, de-constructs, or rebuilds people integrating into society—society in the most generic sense of the term, in the sense of the nation-state as we understand it in the West. We have discussed the place of homeless people in our society; we have discussed employment in relation to the notion of homelessness; we have discussed the place of the social class of origin in relation to the social class of arrival. We have discussed community withdrawal, provided that a community exists. This article is not intended to be exhaustive, but simply to present a study by a group of students who carried out a serious study of the social problems faced by the homeless.
Réseaux sociaux