Indigenizing Supportive Housing

The Dual Model of Housing Care

Differing from provincial supportive housing models, the dual model of housing care integrates cultural support and decolonized harm reduction into housing and service provision; both integral components of pathways toward housing, health and healing for the Indigenous Street Community (ISC).

How can we better support Indigenous people in supportive housing?

The dual model of housing care was developed by the Aboriginal Coalition to End Homelessness Society (ACEH) pursuant to its mission to end Indigenous homelessness on Vancouver Island and in recognition that Indigenous led approaches to ending Indigenous homelessness are needed (1). Differing from provincial supportive housing models, the dual model of housing care integrates cultural support and decolonized harm reduction into housing and service provision; both integral components of pathways toward housing, health and healing for the Indigenous Street Community (ISC). Promise in this model was found while delivering the Priority One program, an initiative that provided culturally supportive housing to the most at-risk members of the ISC (2). Supplemental to this empirical evidence, research is needed to establish this model as an evidence-based leading practice.

Project Lead(s):

Home Organization:

University of British Columbia

Other Participants:

Funding Stream:

Comparative Project

Project Status:

Complete

Timeline

A researcher from UBC was hired for eight calender months to complete a comparative analysis between the dual model of housing care and provincial supportive housing models from the BSH Node’s priority areas, including those developed by AMH Ontario and BC Housing. Research activities will include a literature review, followed by focus groups with the ISC and ACEH staff, culminated by a report.

A focus of the research will be to identify opportunities and challenges this model presents, ensuring that the model is adapted accordingly to best serve the ISC. More broadly, this research will have implications locally and regionally as Indigenous peoples are overrepresented in the homeless population across all priority regions.

Research Outputs

Existing reports, presentation materials, podcasts, webinar recordings and research summaries.

Indigenous-led supportive housing can be transformative

Article

An article on Indigenous housing published in the Conversation.

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