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“How does your residential environment positively or negatively influence your well-being?”: A multicase photovoice study with public housing tenants

Radziszewski, Stephanie; Houle, Janie; Torres, Juan; Leloup, Xavier ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2196-6886 et Coulombe, Simon (2022). “How does your residential environment positively or negatively influence your well-being?”: A multicase photovoice study with public housing tenants American Journal of Community Psychology . DOI: 10.1002/ajcp.12634.

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Résumé

Public housing aims to reduce social inequalities by providing affordable dwellings as a social policy. Anchored in an ecological perspective, the paper reports on a multicase photovoice study documenting public housing tenants' perceptions of how their residential environment influences their well‐being. This design can provide a deeper understanding of the public housing environment to inform change at a programmatic level. To this end, 303 captioned photos were collected by 59 tenant‐researchers at six sites in Québec (Canada). An in‐depth cross‐case analysis of the material led to two key themes with five subthemes each. In the Residential environment perceived as mostly positive theme, the subthemes were access to nature, community resources and services, positive relations among tenants, opportunities for participation, and specific aspects of their home. In the Negative aspects focused on life in public housing theme, the subthemes were strict regulations, lack of respect for tenants' needs, lack of intimacy, lack of proper maintenance, and conflicts between tenants. Findings highlight the dynamic interplay between the residential environment and public housing tenants' well‐being. Two recurring programmatic issues are highlighted: problematic maintenance and limited opportunities for tenants' empowerment. Changes to address these concerns at the programmatic level of public housing could potentially increase tenants' well‐being.

Type de document: Article
Mots-clés libres: Photovoice; logement social; environnement résidentiel; bien-être; Québec
Centre: Centre Urbanisation Culture Société
Date de dépôt: 16 janv. 2023 20:03
Dernière modification: 16 janv. 2023 20:03
URI: https://espace.inrs.ca/id/eprint/13160

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