Conceptualizing an Interdisciplinary Collective Impact Approach to Examine and Intervene in the Chronic Cycle of Homelessness

Author:

Abdel-Samad Mounah,Calzo Jerel P.ORCID,Felner Jennifer K.ORCID,Urada Lianne,Verbyla Matthew E.ORCID,Madanat Hala,Adams Brian E.,Alves Thais,Appleyard Bruce,Chanin Joshua,Flanigan Shawn,Foad Hisham,Ginsberg Maya,Higgins Matthew,Ko Eunjeong,Maher KristenORCID,Mladenov NatalieORCID,Peattie Peggy,Welsh MeganORCID,Sleet DavidORCID

Abstract

Homelessness is a persistent problem in the United States in general and in Southern California especially. While progress has been made in reducing the number of people experiencing homelessness in the United States from 2007 (647,000) to 2019 (567,000), it remains an entrenched problem. The purpose of this paper is to outline a novel, interdisciplinary academic-practice partnership model to address homelessness. Where singular disciplinary approaches may fall short in substantially reducing homelessness at the community and population level, our model draws from a collective impact model which coordinates discipline-specific approaches through mutually reinforcing activities and shared metrics of progress and impact to foster synergy and sustainability of efforts. This paper describes the necessary capacity-building at the institution and community level for the model, the complementary strengths and contributions of each stakeholder discipline in the proposed model, and future goals for implementation to address homelessness in the Southern California region.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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