HOW TO DEVELOP AN HOLISTIC APPROACH

This Guidebook entitled “How to develop a holistic approach” stems from the social experiment led within the Rights First project, co-funded by the EU Commission under its EasI programme (FSE+) and the Government of Brussels Region (from January 2022 to June 2024). The main outcome was the development of an holistic approach overseeing homeless people’s specific needs by implementing innovative, cohesive and sustainable solutions with competent public authorities aiming for the rehabilitation of social rights, finding housing solutions and get back into the labour market, in view of ending homelessness in Brussels. The creation of partnerships is the outcome’s backbone to lifting people out of the street. This project was mentored by two european partners, Uk Crisis and San Joan de Deu, both having already set up a holistic approach in their work.

This guidebook holds examples of partnerships from the three projects, providing different ways to what could be a holistic approach. The first section highlights the partnerships aiming for the rehabilitation of rights. The second focuses on sustainable partnerships for housing and employment support. The last section revolves around the governance possibilities to monitor partnerships and evaluate their impact.

Points of attention: 
Right based approach   

Despite of having international and national laws providing social protection and given the increasing number of homeless people, it is worth asking to what extent social protection contributes to lift people out of the street and to what extent it contributes to combat social exclusion. In terms of accessing social rights, the non-take up phenomenon is a perfect demonstration of people not having access to their rights while being eligible. Studies have highlighted multiple possibilities: 


An integrated approach  

The integrated approach has proven to be efficient in finding solutions to combat and prevent homelessness. 

Developing an integrated approach combined with a human rights-based approach in view of lifting people out of the street through requires taking into account the following: 

The dilemma within an integrated approach is to achieve a collective objective while each situation is treated differently based on people’s vulnerabilities and aspirations. It articulates the combination of a common goal, a multidisciplinary working methodology between partners while customizing solutions for homeless people.

In a multi-governance context  

As a societal problem, homelessness is impacted by health, social, economic and migration policies to not name them all. In a multi-governance context, this can be a challenge in aligning the urgency to help someone in need with rather bureaucratical procedures. 

At the national level, policy making, and policy implementation can be supervised at different levels. Issues regarding competences, territoriality and decision-making must be processed together. However, this diversity may compromise the coordination of these processes in terms of efficiency and efficacity and thus impacting directly homeless people not in the best ways. The European Union fully integrates multi-governance as well. European policies also impact homelessness at local level, particularly when European mobile citizens seek new job opportunities in another European country than theirs.

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