Description
Helter-Shelter is an ethnographic account of the manner in which an emergency shelter is governed on a daily basis, from the perspective of the personnel who are employed and tasked with providing care.
Prashan Ranasinghe focuses on how the founding ethos of the shelter, an ethic of care, is conceptualized and practiced by examining its successes and failures. Ranasinghe reveals how this logic is diluted and adulterated because of two other important logics, security and legality, which, working alongside, take precedence and trump the import of care. The care that is deployed is heavily legalized and securitized and it is also administered inconsistently and idiosyncratically. As a result, disorder and confusion pervade the shelter.
Helter-Shelter offers a unique perspective on the delivery of care, and how this laudable intention faces such daunting challenges.
"Helter-Shelter is superbly written. Prashan Ranasinghe shows an adept ability to synthesize and offer clarity to an oft-complex literature and set of frameworks. It is not easy to make sense of Lefebvre, Jamieson, and Bachelard, and Ranasinghe accomplishes the delicate balance between clarity while retaining the nuances offered by these authors. Ranasinghe beautifully manages to weave these and other authors on space into his analysis of the ethic of care without the reader feeling like they have been hit over the head." -- Dale Spencer, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University
About the Author
Prashan Ranasinghe is an associate professor in the Department of Criminology at the University of Ottawa.
Awards
Short-listed for Canadian Law and Society Association Book Prize 2018 (Canada).
Book Information
ISBN 9781487522063
Author Prashan Ranasinghe
Format Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint University of Toronto Press
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Weight(grams) 440g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 13mm