Vivre dans le chaos

redéfinition des dimensions écologiques du suicide chez les jeunes femmes et fems subissant une injustice relative à leur logement

Auteurs-es

  • Nicole Dunn University of Toronto image/svg+xml
  • Jeffrey Ansloos University of Toronto

Mots-clés :

injustice relative au logement, jeunesse, prévention du suicide, femmes, filles, fem

Résumé

Les tendances suicidaires, chez les jeunes femmes et fems qui subissent une injustice concernant leur logement, constituent une question urgente de santé publique au Canada, ayant cependant fait l’objet de peu d’études. Cette étude met en évidence l’invisibilité de « l’itinérance cachée » et va au-delà des facteurs de risque individuels pour examiner comment les forces structurelles, relationnelles et politiques façonnent la détresse. Ayant recours à la méthodologie de l’enquête narrative et des histoires de vie, cette étude détermine quatre thèmes clés : 1. Quand qui ne dit mot consent; 2. Personnes peu recommandables et autres ruptures; 3. Inconstance et se faire trimbaler dans tous les sens; 4. L’abandon organisé et du chaos, encore du chaos et toujours plus de chaos. Ces thèmes élucident l’entrecroisement de la violence fondée sur le genre, de la négligence systémique et de l’abandon organisé ainsi que son incidence sur le risque de suicide et les stratégies de survie. Cette étude revendique des approches non coercitives et axées sur la justice en matière de prévention du suicide et met en évidence les relations de confiance et les politiques qui s’attaquent à l’injustice relative au logement. Les forces, les limites et de futurs axes de recherche sont également abordés.

Biographies de l'auteur-e

  • Nicole Dunn, University of Toronto

    Nicole Santos Dunn, PhD, RP, R.Psych, CCC, is an Assistant Professor at the University of British Columbia in the faculty of Education, Counselling Psychology, and Special Education. 

  • Jeffrey Ansloos, University of Toronto

    Jeffrey Ansloos PhD, CPsych, is Associate Professor of Indigenous Health and Social Policy and the Tier II Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Studies of Health, Suicide Studies, and Environmental Justice at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto. 

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Publié

2025-12-03

Numéro

Rubrique

Liveable Futures: Radical Imagination as Method // Radical Imagination as Survival