Description
Description
A groundbreaking legal advocate argues that only by recognizing housing as a fundamental human right can we hope to solve America's homelessness crisis.
In And Housing for All, founder of the National Homelessness Law Center Maria Foscarinis reveals the human impact of the housing crisis by sharing personal stories and examining the flawed policies that have perpetuated it. As millions face rising housing costs and encampments spread nationwide, she uncovers why past efforts have failed and what must change to achieve lasting solutions.Drawing from over 35 years of national advocacy, Foscarinis shares compelling stories of individuals and families impacted by homelessness, highlighting their resilience and growing leadership. Blending personal narratives with policy analysis, she reveals how deliberate decisions have fueled the crisis and how public narratives have sustained it.
And Housing for All is essential reading for social justice advocates, policymakers, lawyers, and anyone invested in solving one of America's most pressing challenges.
About the Author
About the Author
Maria Foscarinis founded the National Homelessness Law Center (formerly known as the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty) in 1985 to mount a campaign for a federal response to the crisis which was just beginning to explode across the country. The Law Center won legal victories including the only major federal legislation addressing homelessness--now known and the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act--, upholding education rights for homeless children, converting vacant properties to housing, and combatting the criminalization of homelessness, while also laying the groundwork for the recognition of housing as a human right.
She has been named a Human Rights Hero by the American Bar Association, and is a recipient of the Katharine and George Alexander Law Prize from Santa Clara University School of Law, the John Macy Award from the National Alliance to End Homelessness, the Public Interest Law Award from the Public Interest Foundation at Columbia Law School, and a Rockefeller Foundation Practitioner Residency in Bellagio, Italy.
Foscarinis has been regularly quoted in media outlets such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, NPR, Bloomberg, CNN, BBC, CCTV, and Al-Jazeera, among many others, and has contributed opinion pieces to influential publications including USA Today, the Christian Science Monitor, the Huffington Post, and The Hill. She teaches a seminar on Homelessness Law and Policy at Columbia Law School.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"The book's legislative history is interwoven with personal stories, allowing the neglect to unfold as a slow burn that readers will want resolution to. Examples from Finland, Austria, Kansas City, and Houston showcase what is and isn't working to solve homelessness. Each and every example within this analysis supports Foscarinis's command of the subject, while her compassionate approach will spur change. Foscarinis presents a fresh and comprehensive view of housing as a human right."
-- "Library Journal""Spanning the 40 years that straddled the start of the new millennium, Maria Foscarinis' account of contemporary homelessness and the advocacy movement that has taken shape to contest it is the most complete view from the national perspective we are likely ever to get. In her hands, it acquires thematic continuity, historical depth, backstage political maneuvering, and a steady bassline of casual cruelty masked as rabble management. Animating her own stance is an abiding faith in the corrective power of law allied with organized dissent. Pointedly, she never lets the reader forget that both the wound and efforts to bind it are (as Harold Pinter once said) "peopled." Source material and academic expertise are consigned to endnotes; the narrative work is event-driven, featuring named plaintiffs and their variable cast of tormenters. Threaded throughout and capping off is a spirited - and, notably, far from fanciful - defense of a social right to housing.
This warhorse of a book is a testament to movement lawyering with heart, head, and stamina."
--Kim Hopper, Professor of clinical sociomedical sciences at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, and author of Reckoning with Homelessness
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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