Reviews
What Ensign accomplishes in her new book is remarkable. Way Home is one of the most important books on homelessness I've read, and I couldn't put it down.
As a nurse, researcher, advocate, and person with lived experience of homelessness, Josephine Ensign invites us into the lives of people experiencing homelessness with this beautifully written, exhaustively researched, and evidence-based work. Way Home emphasizes the need for individual and societal empathy in any successful and durable solution to homelessness.
Ensign masterfully and memorably portrays individuals and their homelessness in the larger context of societal structures and policies. I will never forget the tragedy or the strength of her subjects. Way Home is valuable for practitioners, policymakers, and students in understanding the causes, effects, and solutions that can help us end homelessness.
Way Home explores Seattle's homelessness crisis through the lives of those who have experienced it. With depth and empathy, and drawing on decades of experience working with homeless communities as a nurse practitioner, Ensign examines causes and promising solutions such as safe parking programs and the Housing First model, while sharing stories of those affected. Through deep research and evocative prose, she sheds much-needed light on this complex issue and its human cost.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Prologue
1. Prelude to Compassion
2. Seattle is Dying
3. Compromised
4. Lifelines
5. Contesting Spaces
6. Displaced
7. Home Base
8. Roll On
9. Doorway
10. Welcome In
11. Way Home
Epilogue
Index