On the lowest rung of the ladder: How social exclusion, perceived economic inequality and stigma increase homeless people's resignation

Author:

Marinucci Marco1ORCID,Riva Paolo1,Lenzi Michela2,Lasagna Camilla1,Waldeck Daniel3,Tyndall Ian4,Volpato Chiara1

Affiliation:

1. University of Milano‐Bicocca Milano Italy

2. University of Padua Padua Italy

3. Coventry University Coventry UK

4. University of Chichester Chichester UK

Abstract

AbstractDespite the relevance of social exclusion and economic inequality for homelessness, empirical studies investigating how these issues relate to homeless people's psychological well‐being are scarce. We aimed to fill this gap by conducting two quasi‐experimental studies on homeless and non‐homeless groups. The first study (N = 200) showed that homeless (vs. non‐homeless) people presented higher levels of resignation, characterized by depression, alienation, helplessness, and unworthiness (Williams, 2009). The second study (N = 183) replicated the findings from Study 1 and showed that perceived economic inequality could increase homeless people's resignation by emphasizing perceptions of social exclusion. Additional analyses found that identification with the stigmatized homeless group could mediate the relationship between perceived inequality and social exclusion, increasing the resignation. Overall, the results showed that chronic social exclusion of homeless people is associated with higher levels of resignation. Moreover, they showed the role of perceived economic inequality and homeless group stigmatized identification as group‐specific mechanisms favouring social exclusion and ultimately worsening psychological well‐being.

Funder

Ministero dell’Istruzione, dell’Università e della Ricerca

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

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