Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds

Introduction. An estimated one million people currently inhabit vehicles as their primary method of housing in publicly accessible areas across the United States. Few studies have investigated this untraditionally housed population, as separate from traditional homelessness, and no other studies hav...

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Main Author: Kaitlin E. Montague
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2024-06-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://informationr.net/infres/article/view/838
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author Kaitlin E. Montague
author_facet Kaitlin E. Montague
author_sort Kaitlin E. Montague
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. An estimated one million people currently inhabit vehicles as their primary method of housing in publicly accessible areas across the United States. Few studies have investigated this untraditionally housed population, as separate from traditional homelessness, and no other studies have been found that currently explore vehicle resident’s information behaviours. This paper offers preliminary findings from an ethnographic study that explores vehicle residents’ information practices. Method. This work is based on four months of ethnographic research involving participant observation in Santa Cruz, California, which aimed to understand vehicle residents’ information needs and access and the ways that various factors shaped their information practices. Analysis. Ethnographic field notes were analysed using the constant comparative method. Induction was used to identify and categorize recurring conceptualizations and phenomena. Results. Preliminary findings build upon previous research on information grounds. Initial results indicate that marginalizing policies, and in turn, social exclusion, created vibrant environments for information grounds to develop. Conclusion. Geographic locations and movements influence vehicle residents’ information practices. Gaining a deeper understanding of these practices inform both theoretical implications for the information behaviour field and practical implications for local and federal governments to deliver support rather than create marginalizing policies for vehicle residents.
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spelling doaj-art-59dabb67411c40baa5fdf94e2e6eb6932025-02-03T10:10:34ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132024-06-0129242743510.47989/ir292838835Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information groundsKaitlin E. Montague0Rutgers UniversityIntroduction. An estimated one million people currently inhabit vehicles as their primary method of housing in publicly accessible areas across the United States. Few studies have investigated this untraditionally housed population, as separate from traditional homelessness, and no other studies have been found that currently explore vehicle resident’s information behaviours. This paper offers preliminary findings from an ethnographic study that explores vehicle residents’ information practices. Method. This work is based on four months of ethnographic research involving participant observation in Santa Cruz, California, which aimed to understand vehicle residents’ information needs and access and the ways that various factors shaped their information practices. Analysis. Ethnographic field notes were analysed using the constant comparative method. Induction was used to identify and categorize recurring conceptualizations and phenomena. Results. Preliminary findings build upon previous research on information grounds. Initial results indicate that marginalizing policies, and in turn, social exclusion, created vibrant environments for information grounds to develop. Conclusion. Geographic locations and movements influence vehicle residents’ information practices. Gaining a deeper understanding of these practices inform both theoretical implications for the information behaviour field and practical implications for local and federal governments to deliver support rather than create marginalizing policies for vehicle residents.https://informationr.net/infres/article/view/838information behaviourinformation groundsinformation accessethnographyvehicle residents
spellingShingle Kaitlin E. Montague
Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
information behaviour
information grounds
information access
ethnography
vehicle residents
title Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds
title_full Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds
title_fullStr Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds
title_short Mapping the road ahead: understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents’ information grounds
title_sort mapping the road ahead understanding social factors that shape vehicle residents information grounds
topic information behaviour
information grounds
information access
ethnography
vehicle residents
url https://informationr.net/infres/article/view/838
work_keys_str_mv AT kaitlinemontague mappingtheroadaheadunderstandingsocialfactorsthatshapevehicleresidentsinformationgrounds