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Invisible homelessness: anonymity,exposure, and the right to the city
Authors:Sig Langegger  Stephen Koester
Institution:1. Department of Geography, Akita International University, Akita, Japan;2. Departments of Anthropology and Health and Behavioral Sciences, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO, USA
Abstract:The city of Denver, Colorado recently outlawed camping in all open space. Part of a broad effort to accelerate the profit potential of prime urban land through real estate speculation and commerce, the camping ban has dislocated homeless people from the city’s marginal spaces. Based on ethnographic fieldwork and archival research in Denver, this article develops a tripartite approach to public space—prime, everyday, and marginal—to analyze challenging ways in which people who are homeless in Denver must now manage their exposure to others in everyday public spaces. In addition to eliminating places of hard-won safety and security, this singular new code disrupts hygiene, mobility, and sociability routines, thus throwing already precarious lives into further disarray by rendering housing status visible. To demonstrate how everyday social justice springs from interaction between different people co-present in public space, we foreground the voices of Denver’s homeless people, those most impacted by quality of life laws. Evicting individuals from marginal spaces and rendering them visibly homeless in everyday and prime spaces, the ban deprives them of a fundamental right to the city: anonymity.
Keywords:Homelessness  anonymity  public space  exposure theory  right to the city
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