What a Home Does

Author:

Jenkins DavidORCID,Brownlee KimberleyORCID

Abstract

AbstractAnalytic philosophy has largely neglected the topic of homelessness. The few notable exceptions, including work by Jeremy Waldron and Christopher Essert, focus on our interests in shelter, housing, and property rights, but ignore the key social functions that a home performs as a place in which we are welcomed, accepted, and respected. This paper identifies a ladder of home-related concepts which begins with the minimal notion of temporary shelter, then moves to persistent shelter and housing, and finally to the rich notion of a home which focuses on meeting our social needs including, specifically, our needs to belong and to have meaningful control over our social environment. This concept-ladder enables us to distinguish the shelterless from the sheltered; the unhoused from the housed; and the unhomed from the homed. It also enables us to decouple the concept of a home from property rights, which reveals potential complications in people’s living arrangements. For instance, a person could be sheltered but unhoused, housed but homeless, or, indeed, unhoused but homed. We show that we should reserve the concept of home to capture the rich idea of a place of belonging in which our core social needs are met.

Funder

All Souls College, University of Oxford

Canada Excellence Research Chairs, Government of Canada

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Law,Philosophy

Cited by 9 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. ‘Nowhere home’;London Review of International Law;2024-08-30

2. Housing conditions in European one-person households;PLOS ONE;2024-05-17

3. On the Ethics of Interacting;Journal of Applied Philosophy;2024-03-12

4. Justice and Housing;Philosophy Compass;2024-03

5. “The trauma machine expands faster than our services”: Health risks for unhoused people in an early-stage gentrifying area;Health & Place;2023-09

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