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4.3
68 reviewsA deeply humanizing analysis that will change the way you think about poverty & homelessness—for the socially engaged reader of Isabel Wilkerson's Caste & Matthew Desmond's Evicted.
Think about the last time that you saw or interacted with an unhoused person. What did you do? What did you say? Did you offer money or a smile, or did you avert your gaze?
When We Walk By takes an urgent look at homelessness in the US, showing us what we lose—in ourselves & as a society—when we choose to walk past & ignore our neighbors in shelters, insecure housing, or on the streets. & it brilliantly shows what we stand to gain when we embrace our humanity & move toward evidence-based people-first, community-driven solutions, offering social analysis, economic & political histories, & the real stories of unhoused people.
The authors, + Amanda Banh & Andrijana Bilbija, recast chronic homelessness in the US as a byproduct of twin crises: our social services systems are failing, & so is our humanity. Readers will learn:
Why our brains have been trained to overlook our unhoused neighbors
The social, economic, & political forces that shape myths like “all homeless people are addicts” & “they’d have a house if they got a job”
What conservative economics gets wrong about housing insecurity
What relational poverty is, & how to shift away from “us versus them” thinking
That for many Americans, housing insecurity is just one missed paycheck away
Who “the homeless” really are—& why that might surprise you
What you can do to help, starting today
A necessary, deeply humanizing read that goes beyond theory & policy analysis to offer engaged solutions with compassion & heart, When We Walk By is for anyone who cares about homelessness, housing solutions, & their own humanity.