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fewer families with children have chronic patterns of homelessness. Communities recently began to report that number, and only 5% of people in families would meet the HUD definition of chronic homelessness (Henry, Mahathey, et al., 2018, p. 3.3).

      The definition of chronic homelessness focuses on people who are literally homeless –who make extensive use of the shelter system or often sleep in unsheltered locations, or both. For this group, the periods of time not literally homeless may still be remarkably unstable. As Shlay and Rossi (1992) put it, “the line between being homeless and being domiciled is a fuzzy boundary, often and easily crossed.” For example, more than half of a small sample of individuals with serious mental illnesses who entered a shelter in Westchester County had spent most of the past 5 years riding an institutional circuit of shelters, jails, detox facilities, psychiatric hospitals, rehabilitation facilities and the street, punctuated by stays in their own place or living doubled up with other households (Hopper, Jost, Hay, Welber, & Haugland, 1997).

      Youth

      Among the unaccompanied young people (sheltered and unsheltered), only 11% were children under the age of 18 (4,000 compared to 107,000 children experiencing homelessness in the company of adults (Henry, Mahathey, et al., 2018, pp. 1–3). Overwhelmingly, minor children who experience the literal homelessness reported by HUD do so as part of families.

      Programs that are funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to serve homeless youth use a definition of homelessness that is broader than the eligibility criteria for HUD programs. The Runaway and Homeless Youth Act (RHYA) counts as homeless anyone up to age 21 “for whom it is not possible to live in a safe environment with a relative and who have no other safe alternative living situation” (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2016a). Claims that adolescence is the age at highest risk of homelessness usually count young people, including young adults, who meet one of these expanded definitions and also count young parents in families. Some of these young parents were formerly unaccompanied youth who became pregnant or bore children while homeless (Toro, Dworsky, & Fowler, 2007) whereas others became homeless only after becoming pregnant or having a child.

      HUD's estimates of numbers of youth experiencing unaccompanied homelessness are almost certainly undercounts, both because youth may use programs other than the shelters included in the administrative data reported by communities and because unsheltered youth may be even more likely than adults to avoid being found by street counts. HUD's estimates also do not include couch‐surfing or staying in exploitative situations—for example, as a victim of trafficking (Family and Youth Services Bureau, n.d.). In the Voices of Youth Count, a nationally representative sample of households, 12.5% of households with an 18–25‐year‐old member reported that at least one such member had experienced homelessness (self‐defined) or couch surfing without stable housing in the past 12 months. Follow‐up interviews with a small sample of individual youth themselves yielded a rate (including couch surfing) of 9.7% (Morton et al., 2017).

      The Voices of Youth Count national survey also found that 4.3% of households with children 13–17 had a child who had run away, left home because of being asked to leave, couch surfed, or been homeless, although it is not clear that all these children were homeless on their own (Morton et al., 2017). The reasons that children leave home, including family conflict over sexual orientation, step‐parent relationships, and children's behavior (Toro, Dworsky, et al., 2007), are largely different than the reasons that adults become homeless, and the solutions are also quite different. What it takes to resolve homelessness for 13‐year‐olds who have run away or been forced to leave home are quite different from what from what it takes for 18‐year‐olds who are capable of living on their own and holding a lease. In subsequent chapters, we do not consider causes of homelessness or solutions for minor children who become homeless on their own. Young adults (“youth”) 18 and over are included—but typically not broken out—in many of the studies we cite later. Some studies concern special populations of young adults, such as youth aging out of the foster care system. As of this writing, evidence on the effectiveness of special programs for young adults is scarce.

      Veterans

      In the wake of the U.S. military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, federal policymakers became concerned that traumatic combat experience elevates the risk of homelessness, and in 2009 HUD began tracking the numbers of veterans among people experiencing homelessness and describing their characteristics. Similar to all veterans, about 90% are men (Henry, Bishop, et al., 2018). They are more likely to be African American or Hispanic and much less likely to be over 62 years of age than all U.S. veterans, a population that as of the early twenty‐first century still reflects the era when U.S. military forces were much larger and relied on the draft rather than on self‐selection of volunteers.

      So far, those in age groups most likely to have served in Iraq or Afghanistan have only slightly higher rates of homelessness, while those with the highest rates are in middle or late middle age. For example, in 2017, 42% of veterans experiencing homelessness were 51–61 years old, compared with only 18% of all U.S. veterans (Henry, Bishop, et al., 2018). Veterans almost always (98%) experience homelessness on their own (Henry, Bishop, et al., 2018). They may have been married or had a partner, but the partner is no longer with them.

      As the figure shows, infants under the age of one are at higher risk of homelessness than any other age group. Risk remains high during the preschool years and then drops when children enter school and childcare costs go down. Risk continues to fall in adolescence and rises again in early adulthood (the period through age 24 that is included in youth homelessness) and especially the late 20s, when some young people are the parents of those young children. Risk remains nearly as high in middle adulthood and then falls off sharply among older adults. One's picture of a “typical homeless person” may need to be broadened.

      Among adults (including youth over 18), more men than women experience homelessness over the course of a year, 62% vs. 38% (Henry, Mahathey, et al., 2018). The numbers are still more uneven among those who do not have children with them, 71% men vs. 29% women among those using a shelter at some time during a year. Even in families, over

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