Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents

Abstract Background Violence against women (VAW) is the most common cause of women’s homelessness. However, policy and programming for VAW and homelessness have developed and operated in siloes in many countries, including Canada, limiting capacity to address the unique needs of women facing both in...

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Main Authors: Alexa R. Yakubovich, Lisa Boucher, Zoë Dodd, Alyssa Gerhardt, Priya Shastri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-04-01
Series:BMC Public Health
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-22721-4
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author Alexa R. Yakubovich
Lisa Boucher
Zoë Dodd
Alyssa Gerhardt
Priya Shastri
author_facet Alexa R. Yakubovich
Lisa Boucher
Zoë Dodd
Alyssa Gerhardt
Priya Shastri
author_sort Alexa R. Yakubovich
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Violence against women (VAW) is the most common cause of women’s homelessness. However, policy and programming for VAW and homelessness have developed and operated in siloes in many countries, including Canada, limiting capacity to address the unique needs of women facing both interrelated issues. This study uniquely analyzes data from participants experiencing violence and homelessness drawn from each of the VAW and homelessness sectors at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city, Toronto. Methods We qualitatively analyzed data from two studies conducted concurrently in 2021 as part of the Marginalization and COVID-19 (MARCO) Project, which aimed to investigate outcomes of the COVID-19 response among people experiencing marginalization in the Greater Toronto Area. Participants were 10 survivors who accessed VAW services and 23 residents of homeless encampments. We applied a reflexive thematic analysis within a feminist poststructuralist framework to explore participants’ experiences of violence and homelessness and interrogate the structural factors that dictate which and how different participants ‘end up’ in different sectors and their outcomes. Results We generated three themes in our analysis: (1) inequities exacerbated: (abuse of) power and control as pathways into women’s homelessness; (2) negotiating trade-offs between safety and autonomy; and (3) gender stereotypes versus gender-transformative approaches. There was a common pathway of VAW to homelessness, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and most acutely felt by participants facing intersecting forms of marginalization (e.g., economic or immigration precarity). Considerations around safety and autonomy were central to shaping experiences of women’s homelessness. Participants described ways in which gender stereotypes, both internalized and at systems- and organizational-levels, harmed them in terms of service (in)access – especially for women who used substances or were lone caregivers. The most positive experiences when accessing shelter or housing services were when participants received gender-specific supports that promoted their safety and empowerment – in many cases, in spite of the constraints presented by COVID-19 public health measures. Conclusions Our results highlight the need for strengthened collaboration between the VAW and housing/homelessness sectors and a unified policy strategy to address homelessness that applies a gender-transformative and intersectional approach, during and beyond public health emergencies.
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spelling doaj-art-fbfe5ed5478d41a9867192c5541202a62025-08-20T03:09:20ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582025-04-0125111610.1186/s12889-025-22721-4Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residentsAlexa R. Yakubovich0Lisa Boucher1Zoë Dodd2Alyssa Gerhardt3Priya Shastri4Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Dalhousie UniversityBruyére Health Research InstituteMAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions, Unity Health TorontoDepartment of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Dalhousie UniversityWoman Abuse Council of TorontoAbstract Background Violence against women (VAW) is the most common cause of women’s homelessness. However, policy and programming for VAW and homelessness have developed and operated in siloes in many countries, including Canada, limiting capacity to address the unique needs of women facing both interrelated issues. This study uniquely analyzes data from participants experiencing violence and homelessness drawn from each of the VAW and homelessness sectors at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city, Toronto. Methods We qualitatively analyzed data from two studies conducted concurrently in 2021 as part of the Marginalization and COVID-19 (MARCO) Project, which aimed to investigate outcomes of the COVID-19 response among people experiencing marginalization in the Greater Toronto Area. Participants were 10 survivors who accessed VAW services and 23 residents of homeless encampments. We applied a reflexive thematic analysis within a feminist poststructuralist framework to explore participants’ experiences of violence and homelessness and interrogate the structural factors that dictate which and how different participants ‘end up’ in different sectors and their outcomes. Results We generated three themes in our analysis: (1) inequities exacerbated: (abuse of) power and control as pathways into women’s homelessness; (2) negotiating trade-offs between safety and autonomy; and (3) gender stereotypes versus gender-transformative approaches. There was a common pathway of VAW to homelessness, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and most acutely felt by participants facing intersecting forms of marginalization (e.g., economic or immigration precarity). Considerations around safety and autonomy were central to shaping experiences of women’s homelessness. Participants described ways in which gender stereotypes, both internalized and at systems- and organizational-levels, harmed them in terms of service (in)access – especially for women who used substances or were lone caregivers. The most positive experiences when accessing shelter or housing services were when participants received gender-specific supports that promoted their safety and empowerment – in many cases, in spite of the constraints presented by COVID-19 public health measures. Conclusions Our results highlight the need for strengthened collaboration between the VAW and housing/homelessness sectors and a unified policy strategy to address homelessness that applies a gender-transformative and intersectional approach, during and beyond public health emergencies.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-22721-4ViolenceHomelessnessWomenGenderCOVID-19
spellingShingle Alexa R. Yakubovich
Lisa Boucher
Zoë Dodd
Alyssa Gerhardt
Priya Shastri
Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
BMC Public Health
Violence
Homelessness
Women
Gender
COVID-19
title Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
title_full Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
title_fullStr Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
title_full_unstemmed Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
title_short Women’s experiences of homelessness and violence during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada’s largest city: an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
title_sort women s experiences of homelessness and violence during the covid 19 pandemic in canada s largest city an integrated qualitative analysis of clients of violence against women organizations and encampment residents
topic Violence
Homelessness
Women
Gender
COVID-19
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-22721-4
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