31/54 Report of the Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination in this context
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2015 Dec
Session: 31st Regular Session (2016 Feb)
Agenda Item:
Human Rights Council Thirty-first session
Agenda item 3
Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights,
including the right to development
Report of the Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination in this context
Note by the Secretariat
The Secretariat has the honour to transmit to the Human Rights Council the thematic
report of the Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an
adequate standard of living and on the right to non-discrimination in this context, Leilani
Farha, prepared pursuant to Council resolution 25/17. In the report, the Special Rapporteur
considers homelessness as a global human rights crisis directly linked to increased
inequality of wealth and property, requiring urgent attention. She examines how
homelessness is caused by States’ failures to respond both to individual circumstances and
to a range of structural causes, abandoning responsibility for social protection and allowing
unregulated real estate speculation and investment to exclude a growing number of people
from any form of housing. She outlines a clear set of obligations on States under
international human rights law that, if complied with, would eliminate homelessness. She
proposes a global campaign to eliminate homelessness by 2030.
Report of the Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination in this context
Contents
Page
I. Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 3
II. Towards a human rights definition of homelessness ........................................................................ 4
A. What does “homelessness” mean? ........................................................................................... 4
B. A three-dimensional human rights definition of homelessness ............................................... 5
III. Discrimination, stigmatization and social exclusion ........................................................................ 6
A. Social construction of homelessness ........................................................................................ 6
B. Criminalization of homelessness ............................................................................................. 7
C. Discrimination in access to land and housing .......................................................................... 7
IV. Interconnected causes of homelessness ............................................................................................ 8
V. Homelessness and marginalized groups ........................................................................................... 10
VI. The human rights framework for addressing homelessness and access to justice ............................ 12
A. State obligations....................................................................................................................... 12
B. Access to justice ...................................................................................................................... 13
VII. Metrics of homelessness and human rights accountability............................................................... 16
VIII. Strategic policy responses to homelessness ..................................................................................... 18
IX. Conclusions and recommendations .................................................................................................. 20
I. Introduction
1. The present report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to adequate housing as a
component of the right to an adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-
discrimination in this context, is submitted pursuant to Human Rights Council resolutions
15/8 and 25/17.
2. Homelessness is a global human rights crisis that demands an urgent global
response. It is occurring in all socioeconomic contexts — in developed, emerging and
developing economies, in prosperity as well as in austerity. It is a diverse phenomenon,
affecting different groups of people in different ways but with common features. It is
symptomatic of the failure of governments1 to address growing inequalities in income,
wealth and access to land and property and to effectively respond to the challenges of
migration and urbanization. Homelessness occurs when housing is treated as a commodity
rather than as a human right.
3. At the same time, homelessness represents individual experiences of some of the
most vulnerable members of society, characterized by abandonment, despair, erosion of
self-esteem, denial of dignity, serious health consequences and loss of life. The term
“homeless” describes not only a lack of housing but also identifies a social group. The close
link between the denial of rights and a social identity distinguishes homelessness from
deprivations of other socioeconomic rights. People denied water or food are rarely treated
as a social group in the way homeless people are. Those who are homeless are subject to
stigmatization, social exclusion and criminalization.
4. Homelessness is an extreme violation of the rights to adequate housing and non-
discrimination and often also a violation of the rights to life, to security of person, to health,
to protection of the home and family and to freedom from cruel and inhuman treatment.
However, it has not been addressed with the urgency and priority that ought to be accorded
to so widespread and severe a violation of human rights. Homelessness was not mentioned
in the Millennium Development Goals, is absent from the Sustainable Development Goals
and has been rarely mentioned in the preparatory work for the United Nations Conference
on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III). Violations of the right to life
because of homelessness have rarely been addressed as such by international human rights
bodies.
5. In the present report, the Special Rapporteur considers how homelessness is
experienced as a human rights violation and how it can be effectively challenged and
eliminated if addressed within a human rights framework. She urges that the elimination of
homelessness be affirmed as a cross-cutting human rights priority in socioeconomic policy,
planning and development.
6. The Special Rapporteur solicited and received over 70 responses with information
and views on the issue from States, civil society, national human rights institutions and
United Nations agencies.2 She held a two-day expert consultation in Buenos Aires3 with 25
experts in homelessness and the right to housing from around the world. She is grateful for
1 In the present report, “governments” refers to all levels of government, including local and
subnational, unless otherwise stipulated.
2 All responses to questionnaires and information on the consultation are available from
www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Housing/Pages/Homelessnessandhumanrights.aspx.
3 Co-organized with the Argentinian non-governmental organization Centro de Estudios Legales y
Sociales in November 2015.
all the information and guidance received. The Special Rapporteur is also appreciative of
the important work done on this topic by her predecessor, Miloon Kothari.
II. Towards a human rights definition of homelessness
A. What does “homelessness” mean?
7. The word “homelessness” in English does not always have an equivalent translation
in other languages. In English, “homelessness” suggests both a lack of physical housing and
a loss of a sense of social belonging. In some other languages, the closest word to
homelessness would be “rooflessness”, lacking shelter or transience. In French,
homelessness is referred to as either “sans domicile fixe” or “sans-abrisme”. In Spanish,
homelessness is referred to as “sin hogar” or “sin techo” or “en situación de calle” or
“poblaciones callejeras”.
8. Definitions of homelessness adopted by international agencies, governments,
researchers or civil society vary widely, depending on language, socioeconomic conditions,
cultural norms, the groups affected and the purpose for which homelessness is being
defined. It is generally agreed, however, that the experience of homelessness around the
world is not fully captured without a richer definition that goes beyond reference to
deprivation of physical shelter.
9. The definition of homelessness is often based on where individuals live or sleep, for
instance, those who sleep “rough”, in emergency shelters or in institutions, such as prisons
or psychiatric institutions. While definitions on the basis of location have the advantage of
being less ambiguous, they tend to distort perceptions of who is homeless. Single men will
live on the streets or in shelters, for example, while women with children will seek other
options, such as with family or friends, to avoid the severe repercussions associated with
street life, including violence and child apprehension.
10. Homelessness has also been defined with reference to what is lacking. The Statistics
Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations has
defined “primary homelessness” as persons living without a shelter or living quarters and
“secondary homelessness” as including persons with no place of usual residence. In some
contexts, homelessness is understood as a lack of access to land as well as to shelter. In
rural Bangladesh, for example, homelessness is assessed on the basis of whether a
household has a regularized plot of land as well a roof overhead.4 Other definitions focus on
being deprived of a certain minimum quality of housing. The Institute of Global
Homelessness has proposed as a global definition: “lacking access to minimally adequate
housing”, while listing various categories of living situations that fall within this general
definition.
11. However, many people living in informal settlements and lacking basic services are
certainly deprived of minimally adequate housing yet they have worked hard to establish
and build homes and, importantly, would not self-identify as homeless. It would, therefore,
be inappropriate to define the more than 1 billion people worldwide estimated to be living
in informal settlements as homeless, even though their needs are critical and must also be
addressed as a priority. Within informal settlements there are, however, residents who have
established temporary accommodation because they have no other options who are living in
4 See G. Tipple and S. Speak, “Definitions of homelessness in developing countries”, Habitat
International, 29 (2005), p. 342. See also the report of the Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as
a component of the right to an adequate standard of living (E/CN.4/2005/48).
particularly precarious situations — overcrowded and unsafe situations, sometimes renting
informally, subject to eviction at a moment’s notice or in grossly inadequate shelter unfit
for human habitation. These households might reasonably be considered and may self-
identify as homeless.
12. Different definitions can create different perceptions and policy priorities. In Japan,
when homelessness was defined in terms of those living on the street, available data
suggested declining numbers as a result of shelter programmes. However, when defined as
“lacking access to minimally adequate housing”, data showed increasing numbers of
homeless.5
13. Definitions relating only to a lack of physical shelter also fail to take into account
the loss of social connection — the feeling of “belonging nowhere”6 — experienced by
homeless persons. A number of States have attempted to address this concern by
referencing the rupture of family or social connections in their definitions of homelessness.
Including the more qualitative aspects of social exclusion linked to homelessness, however,
can make definitions too imprecise for some purposes.
14. Different types of homelessness can also be understood in relation to choices of
survival strategies and lifestyles. Advocates for street-connected children and young people
suggest that a definition of homelessness that recognizes agency and choice as well as
deprivation is preferable.
B. A three-dimensional human rights definition of homelessness
15. Different definitions of homelessness serve different purposes. A universally applied
definition with common measurement, as proposed by the Institute of Global Homelessness
could play an important role in promoting enhanced State accountability and informing
development goals.
16. From a human rights perspective, the Special Rapporteur advocates a flexible and
contextual approach to defining homelessness that recognizes experiences and
understandings of homelessness among different groups and in diverse circumstances. A
human rights definition should focus attention on the most desperate situations while
ensuring that those who are homeless identify those circumstances themselves, define their
needs and are recognized as actors in effecting change to fully realize their right to adequate
housing. The social dimensions of homelessness are also central to a human rights
definition.
17. In light of these considerations, the Special Rapporteur proposes the following three-
dimensional approach anchored in human rights:
(a) The first dimension addresses the absence of home — both the absence of the
material aspect of minimally adequate housing and of the social aspect of a secure place to
establish a family or social relationships and participate in community life;
(b) The second dimension considers homelessness as a form of systemic
discrimination and social exclusion, recognizing that being deprived of a home gives rise to
a social identity through which “the homeless” is constituted as a social group subject to
discrimination and stigmatization;
5 Rayna Rushenko, “Homelessness and related policy in Japan and Malaysia”, presentation on
homelessness in a global landscape, 2 June 2015. Available from
http://media.wix.com/ugd/d41ae6_167a5007c11a4cc49fe75499fd60325b.pdf.
6 United Nations Human Settlements Programme, Strategies to Combat Homelessness (2000).
(c) The third dimension recognizes those who are homeless as rights holders
who are resilient in the struggle for survival and dignity. With a unique understanding of
the systems that deny them their rights, homeless people must be recognized as central
agents of the social transformation necessary for the realization of the right to adequate
housing.
18. A human rights definition of homelessness undermines “moral” explanations of
homelessness as personal failures to be solved with acts of charity and instead reveals
patterns of inequality and injustice that deny those who are homeless their rights to be equal
members of society.
III. Discrimination, stigmatization and social exclusion
A. Social construction of homelessness
19. Those who are homeless are constructed as a social group. Worldwide, their identity
is created and then reinforced by people who have more money, more power or more
influence. It is a vicious circle. Laws, policies, business practices and media stories depict
and treat homeless people as morally inferior, undeserving of assistance and authors of their
own misfortune, and blame them for the social problems they come to represent. Once
stigmatized, their needs are further neglected and inequality and discrimination further
entrenched.
20. Strategies to address homelessness are, ironically, often tainted with prejudice and
stigmatization. For example, in August 2015, the office of the Mayor of New York
introduced a mobile telephone application called Map the Homeless7 that allowed users to
take snapshots of homeless people and report them to the police. Social media hashtag
labels included #AggressivePanhandling and #Violent.
21. Homeless people are subject to constant intimidation and harassment by authorities
and the general public; they are denied access to basic services or places to shower, urinate
or defecate; they are rounded up and forced out of cities and relocated to uninhabitable
places; they are walked over and passed by; they are subject to extreme forms of violence,
including hate crimes and sexual violence; and they are often the subject of vilification. At
the same time, some forms of homelessness remain totally invisible and neglected, in
particular in parts of the global South, where homelessness remains relatively
unacknowledged or where the distinction between very precarious housing conditions and
homelessness may not be easily drawn.
22. The humiliation homeless people suffer in their daily lives cannot be
underestimated. Take for example, the experience of women who lack adequate sanitation
facilities, especially during menstrual cycles, or of families who are treated like “human
waste”, forced to establish their households on or next to a garbage dump. Homeless people
have told the Special Rapporteur, often through tears, that more than any material security,
what they yearn for is to be “seen”, to be recognized and treated by society as human
beings with inherent dignity and respect.
7 Available online from https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.
dfox.nycmapthehomeless&hl=en.
B. Criminalization of homelessness
23. National and local laws often make homeless people into lawbreakers, rather than
protecting their rights. Laws are created to render homeless people invisible, to displace
them from land or housing and destroy their makeshift shelters. In many places punitive
measures such as fines or incarceration are imposed for activities linked to basic survival,
including constructing any kind of shelter out of cardboard.8 Laws enable authorities to
“rescue” street-connected children, depriving them of their liberty without due process or
respect for the social networks upon which they rely.
24. Such laws are often framed under the guise of public health and safety but, in reality,
the aim is to “beautify” an area for the promotion of tourism and business or to increase
property values. Examples are countless: in Zimbabwe, an operation to “sweep out the
rubbish” through demolitions of shanty towns in 2005 left up to 1.5 million people
homeless in the middle of the winter.9 In June 2014, the Mayor of Honolulu introduced new
measures to crack down on homelessness because tourists want to see “their paradise, not
homeless people sleeping”. In Medellín, Colombia, during the World Urban Forum, the
homeless population was transported outside of the city.10 In Australia, “move on” laws
permit authorities to “disperse” homeless people “where a person’s mere presence could
cause anxiety to another person or interfere with another’s ‘reasonable enjoyment’ of the
space”.11
C. Discrimination in access to land and housing
25. The favouring of profit over people’s human rights through the unequal allocation of
land, property, housing and related services in cities is a major driver of homelessness.
Unregulated or underregulated financial and other market forces, and unfettered land and
property speculation resulting in escalating land values, all contribute to the inequality of
wealth distribution and homelessness. These systemic inequalities are compounded by
direct discrimination against people who are poor, often pushing them to precarious
housing conditions, including into informal settlements or on occupied land, and ultimately
into homelessness. Many municipalities use planning and zoning laws or regulations to
prevent construction of shelters or affordable housing in their communities. Homeless
people are often denied opportunities to live in central locations; instead, they are
compelled to live in remote, isolated and poorly serviced areas where there are no jobs.
26. Dichotomies of legal/illegal, formal/informal and deserving/undeserving applied in
the global South parallel the criminalization of homelessness in northern countries. The
urban poor are made “illegal” and “encroachers” by the denial of fair access to land and
legal status or title. People who have been rendered homeless in urban centres are relocated
8 National Coalition for the Homeless, Share No More: The Criminalization of Efforts to Feed People
in Need (October 2014), available from http://nationalhomeless.org/wp-
content/uploads/2014/10/Food-Sharing2014.pdf.
9 Owen Dyer, “Zimbabwean clearance policy leaves 1.5 million people homeless”, British Medical
Journal, vol. 331, No. 7509, p. 130 (2005).
10 Greg Scruggs, “Medellin Opens Its Changing Streets to the World Urban Forum”, available from
https://nextcity.org/daily/entry/medellin-opens-its-changing-streets-to-the-world-urban-forum.
11 Response to the questionnaire from the Australian Human Rights Commission.
to city peripheries and deprived of economic opportunities and social networks, a process
that has been labelled “socio-spatial stigmatization”.12
27. Widespread and severe discrimination and stigmatization on the ground of
homelessness has rarely been addressed effectively by national human rights institutions or
subjected to effective judicial or administrative remedies, and only rarely recognized in
domestic legislation as a prohibited form of discrimination.
IV. Interconnected causes of homelessness
28. Homelessness is caused by the interplay between individual circumstances and
broader systemic factors. A human rights response to homelessness addresses both. It
understands that homelessness may be linked to individual dynamics such as psychosocial
disabilities, unexpected job loss, addictions or complex choices to become street–
connected, and that a major cause of homelessness is the failure of governments to respond
to unique individual circumstances with compassion and respect for individual dignity. A
human rights approach must also, however, address the overarching structural and
institutional causes of homelessness — the cumulative effect of domestic policies,
programmes and legislation, as well as international financial and development agreements
that contribute to and create homelessness. In her consultations, the Special Rapporteur
found that inequality and the conditions that breed it are the most consistently identified
causes of homelessness.
29. Rapid global urbanization has resulted in an astonishing accumulation of wealth for
a few, accompanied by increasing poverty for many. Reliance on private market housing
supply to respond to urbanization needs has meant that new housing supply has targeted
mostly the rich, creating inflated real estate values, speculation and significant deficits of
affordable housing. People who move to cities often have no choice but to live in informal
settlements where millions suffer, in varying degrees, from poor sanitation, lack of access
to clean water, overcrowding and makeshift structures. Instead of ensuring access for
people in need of housing, land regulations, planning and zoning have rendered informal
settlements “illegal”, favoured commercial development over housing and failed to respect
the social function of land as a public good. The legacy of colonialism in some countries
has embedded inequality in land and property.
30. The precariousness of informality and the prevalence of development-based
evictions continue to be major structural causes of homelessness. Informal neighbourhoods
are wiped out and replaced with high-end tourist attractions, shopping malls or
entertainment districts. Land contamination and mismanagement compound these effects.
Evictions without adequate resettlement, as is common, invariably lead to homelessness.13
31. Worldwide, there is evidence of a consistent pattern: governments have abandoned
their critical role in ensuring social protection, including affordable housing, have cut or
privatized social benefits and have deferred to the private market, allowing private actors
and elites with access to power and money to control key areas of decision-making.14 As a
result, real estate and speculative capital have guided land use and urban development.
12 See Urban Policies and the Right to the City in India, United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (New Delhi, 2011), pp. 63-75. Available from
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0021/002146/214602e.pdf.
13 See, for example, the case of the Badia community in Lagos, Nigeria (case NGA 1/2015). An urgent
appeal by the Special Rapporteur will be made available at the thirty-first session of the Human
Rights Council.
14 Response to questionnaire from the Danish Institute for Human Rights.
Even where there has been large-scale investment in affordable housing, such as in Sao
Paulo, Brazil, the interests of speculative capital have dominated.15 Labour market
deregulation, reduced rates of taxation on wealthier individuals and corporations,
displacement by extractive industries, dams and other developments, the privatization of
infrastructure and services, predatory lending and many other factors have all emerged from
the abandonment of the central role of governments.
32. The proliferation of trade and investment agreements has dramatically altered State
accountability, with the interests of large corporate investors prioritized over obligations to
protect human rights and ensure the sustainability of local enterprises and communities.
33. Fiscal crises around the world have resulted in significant increases in homelessness
and have given rise to a new category of homeless — highly educated individuals who had
a good standard of living but who, due to an economic crisis, experienced unemployment
and ultimately homelessness. The 2008 crisis, for example, and the accompanying austerity
measures, caused a massive rise in homelessness in several European countries.16 Evidence
suggests, however, that widespread homelessness did not occur in the aftermath of the
global economic crisis in countries where governments were careful to ensure that reactive
measures did not undermine social protection.
34. The causes of homelessness vary among particular groups. Street-connected children
come from families with a wide range of experiences, including death, dislocation, disease,
isolation, poverty, mental illness, domestic violence, child abuse and drug use. Women are
forced into homelessness because of violence, unequal access to land and property, unequal
wages and other forms of discrimination. Persons with disabilities are made homeless by
lack of work, livelihoods and accessible housing. Young people are often denied access to
housing and services in cities if they do not have appropriate government-issued
documentation or identity cards. Conflict results in massive displacement and migration, as
has been evidenced clearly by the waves of refugees from countries such as Afghanistan,
Eritrea, Iraq, Somalia and the Syrian Arab Republic escaping from conflict, widespread
violence and insecurity.
35. Rural homelessness has been the result of decreasing food security from household
production, climate change, corporatization of agriculture, loss of land through subdivision
at inheritance, declining civil security in rural areas, extreme poverty, unregulated resource
exploitation and natural disasters. Rural homelessness usually leads people to migrate to
urban areas in search of work and housing.
36. Many societal changes without adequate State responses contribute to homelessness.
For example, the break-up of traditional family structures is a prevalent cause of
homelessness. Men who move to cities for economic reasons often forgo shelter in order to
save money to send back to their families in rural areas. In many States, long traditions of
extended family support and kinship responsibility at the community level have been
eroded. Illness, including the HIV/AIDS pandemic, is both a major cause and effect of
homelessness.
37. Natural disasters, such as the 2004 tsunami in South-East Asia and the 2008
earthquake that struck Sichuan Province, China, result in homelessness by destroying
housing, infrastructure and livelihoods and setting back housing strategies. The earthquake
15 Response to the questionnaire from the Public Defender of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
16 See, for illustration, the response to the questionnaire from the Spanish Ombudsman; Olga
Theodorikakou et al, “‘Neo-homelessness’ and the Greek Crisis” (2013), available from
http://feantsaresearch.org/IMG/pdf/ot_et_al_review.pdf; and European Commission, “Homelessness
during the crisis”, available from http://ec.europa.eu/social/BlobServlet?docId=9847&langId=en.
in Nepal in 2015 left thousands homeless, with 320,000 children sleeping rough in the
immediate aftermath.17
Informal settlements are often located in disaster-risk areas.
International responses to natural disasters tend to focus on immediate emergency needs for
medical care and shelter, sometimes requiring proof of prior residence or tenure
arrangements in order to provide services — which homeless people lack — and neglecting
the need for longer-term strategies to address the resulting legacy of homelessness.
38. The common denominator in virtually all structural causes of homelessness is
government decision-making inconsistent with human rights — neglecting or failing to
respond adequately to the needs of the most disadvantaged in response to crises or
economic developments and allowing unregulated market forces to render large numbers of
people homeless.18 Homelessness is created when apparently external structural causes
converge with the systemic patterns of social exclusion and discrimination and when
governments fail to address new challenges within a human rights framework.
V. Homelessness and marginalized groups
39. Discrimination is both a cause and a consequence of homelessness. Those who face
discrimination on the grounds of race, ethnicity, place of origin, socioeconomic status,
family status, gender, mental or physical disability, health condition, sexual orientation
and/or gender identity and age are more likely to become homeless and, once homeless,
experience additional discrimination. The intersections of other grounds of discrimination
with homelessness vary in different countries. In some, for example, racial inequality
intersects strongly with homelessness. In Brazil, African-Brazilians make up only 7 per
cent of the population of wealthy areas and yet make up the majority in informal
settlements.19 In the United States of America, black families are seven times more likely to
be homeless than white families.20
40. The ongoing legacy of discriminatory customary and statutory laws on divorce,
inheritance and matrimonial property — as well as social practices that attribute housing to
male heads of households and the resultant poverty — deprive women of security of tenure
and render them particularly vulnerable to homelessness.21 When women are widowed,
separated or divorced,22 need to leave violent households or flee situations of armed conflict
or natural disasters, or are evicted from their homes, they face significant risks of becoming
homeless.23 Divorced and widowed women in Bangladesh and Lebanon, for example, are
reported to be living in dilapidated shacks in dangerous informal settlements and women
fleeing violence in Kyrgyzstan and Papua New Guinea are left with few housing options.24
41. The global economic crisis has had a distinct impact on women’s homelessness. In
Spain, for example, many single mothers were overindebted from home purchases. In many
17 Save the Children, “320,000 Children Homeless in Nepal” (1 May 2015), available from
www.savethechildren.org/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c=8rKLIXMGIpI4E&b=9241341&ct=14637
607.
18 According to the response to the questionnaire from the Norwegian Refugee Council, humanitarian
aid often is allocated to male heads of households, thus further discriminating against women.
19 The Economist, “Race in Brazil” (28 January 2012), available from
www.economist.com/node/21543494.
20 National Coalition for the Homeless, “Who is homeless?” (2009), available from
www.nationalhomeless.org/publications/facts/Whois.pdf.
21 Response to the questionnaire from Human Rights Watch, United States.
22 Response to the questionnaire from Monarch Housing Association.
23 Response to the questionnaire from Human Rights Watch, United States.
24 Ibid.
cases, former partners or husbands who shared mortgages refused to negotiate with banks
for debt restructuring, relief or cancellation. When their homes were repossessed, they were
left with significant debt, often living in insecure housing — at severe risk of
homelessness.25
42. Once homeless, women’s experiences are acute. They are exposed to high rates of
violence, including rape. In its inquiry into the situation of missing and murdered
indigenous women in Canada, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
Women recognized the link between Aboriginal women’s poverty, homelessness and their
disappearances and murder.26
43. Homelessness among children and young people has reached critical proportions.
Factors that push children into leaving home include parents’ unemployment and poverty;
family disintegration and parental abuse; parental drug and alcohol addictions; and being
orphaned owing to HIV/AIDS, Ebola, armed conflict or natural disaster. Some families,
unable to support children because of extreme poverty, abandon or send them to urban
areas to work.27 Children raised in residential institutions often find themselves homeless
when they reach the age at which institutional care ceases.28 Identified “pull” factors
include “spatial freedom, financial independence, adventure, city glamour and street-based
friendships or gangs”.29
44. Most families of street-connected children have experienced persistent
discrimination, poverty and social exclusion. Street-connected children and young people
face particular challenges, including the threat of being removed from their parents for
neglect and put into orphanages or foster systems.30 Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and
intersex young people are overrepresented in homeless populations in some countries and
face additional stigmatization and social exclusion from their families and communities,
and are more vulnerable to violence and more likely to be turned away from shelters.
45. Families with children are at increasing risk of homelessness as parents are deprived
of the income necessary for housing and supply of affordable housing is depleted. In
Ireland, families with children have become the fastest growing group within the homeless
population.31 Those families risk losing their children to public authorities for failing to
provide adequate housing.
46. People on the move, especially international migrants, refugees and internally
displaced persons, are also at significant risk of homelessness. Those groups suffer multiple
discrimination and numerous obstacles in securing temporary or permanent housing. In
many countries, such as Denmark32 and the Netherlands, public shelters do not
accommodate migrants or only accommodate them for limited periods of time.33 Migrants
are consequently forced to settle in slums, shacks and derelict or unfinished buildings;
25 Ibid.
26 See CEDAW/C/OP.8/CAN/1, paras. 112-118.Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.
27 Response to the questionnaire from Safe Child Africa, United Kingdom.
28 Response to the questionnaire from Ombudsman of the Republic of Moldova.
29 See A/HRC/19/35, para. 19.
30 Responses to the questionnaire from the organizations El Caracol AC of Mexico and Habitat for
Humanity of Hungary.
31 Response to the questionnaire from the organization FOCUS, Ireland.
32 Response to the questionnaire from the Danish Institute for Human Rights.
33 See case No. NLD 1/2014, in A/HRC/29/50.
migrant domestic workers have reported being forced to sleep in hallways, unprotected
living spaces or closets of the homes in which they work.34
47. Persons with disabilities are particularly vulnerable to homelessness. In all parts of
the world, psychosocial disability can make it impossible for people to secure employment
and earn a living to pay for housing.35 At the same time, many States do not ensure access
to the community-based support that people with disabilities need. In States where people
with perceived psychosocial disabilities are institutionalized, the support or housing
available upon their release are often inadequate.36 Where deinstitutionalization has been
implemented, States have failed to provide the necessary social support for housing in the
community.
VI. The human rights framework for addressing homelessness and access to justice
A. State obligations
48. Homelessness lies at the extreme end of the spectrum of violations of the right to
adequate housing. As such, States should treat homelessness with the highest level of
urgency. Twenty-five years ago, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
stated that a State party to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights in which any significant number of individuals are deprived of basic shelter and
housing is, prima facie, failing to discharge its obligations under the Covenant.37 States are
required to demonstrate that every effort has been made to use all resources that are at their
disposition in an effort to satisfy, as a matter of priority, those minimum obligations.38
49. State obligations in relation to homelessness have been clearly articulated and can be
summarized as follows:
(a) States have an immediate obligation to adopt and implement strategies to
eliminate homelessness. These strategies must contain clear goals and timelines and must
set out the responsibilities of all levels of government and of other actors for the
implementation of specific, time-bound measures, in consultation with and with
participation by homeless people;39
(b) States must combat discrimination, stigma and negative stereotyping of
homeless people as a matter of urgency and provide legal protection from discrimination
because of social and economic situation, which includes homelessness;40
34 Human Rights Watch, “Domestic plight: how Jordanian laws, officials, employers and recruiters fail
abused migrant domestic workers” (27 September 2011), available from
www.hrw.org/report/2011/09/27/domestic-plight/how-jordanian-laws-officials-employers-and-
recruiters-fail-abused.
35 Response to questionnaire from the Ombudsman of Albania.
36 Response to the questionnaire from Human Rights Watch, United States.
37 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 3 (1990) on the
nature of States parties’ obligations, para. 10.
38 Ibid.
39 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 4 (1991) on the right
to adequate housing, para 12; concluding observations of the Committee on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights on Canada (E/C.12/CAN/CO/4 and E/C.12/CAN/CO/5).
40 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 20 (2009) on non-
discrimination in economic, social and cultural rights, para. 35.
(c) Evictions should never render individuals homeless. The prohibition of
evictions leading to homelessness is immediate, absolute and is not subject to available
resources;41
(d) Eviction without full consultation with those affected is a clear violation of
international human rights. The obligation to explore every alternative to eviction, never to
evict into homelessness and to ensure that residents are adequately consulted about
resettlement plans should be applied under domestic law to both private and public land or
property owners.42 States must take all appropriate measures, to the maximum of available
resources, to ensure that adequate alternative housing, resettlement or access to productive
land, as the case may be, is available;
(e) States have an immediate obligation to ensure that every decision or policy is
consistent with the goal of the elimination of homelessness. Any decision that results in
homelessness must be regarded as unacceptable and contrary to human rights. Policy and
planning must apply the maximum of available resources, including unused or vacant lands
and housing units, with a view to ensuring access to land and housing for marginalized
groups;
(f) States have a firm legal obligation to regulate and engage with non-State
actors so as to ensure that all of their actions and policies are in accordance with the right to
adequate housing and the prevention and amelioration of homelessness. Regulation of
private actors should include requirements on developers and investors to address
homelessness and work in partnership to provide affordable housing in all developments;43
(g) Access to effective remedies to homelessness must be ensured, including
enforcement of obligations linked to the progressive realization of the right to housing and
the elimination of homelessness.44
B. Access to justice
50. It is of critical importance that courts and international human rights bodies engage
more actively with the need for access to justice and protection of human rights of those
who are homeless. Access to effective remedies was the subject of the first case under the
Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
regarding foreclosure procedures in Spain, where an estimated 400,000 mortgage
foreclosures took place between 2008 and 2012.45 The Committee clarified that ensuring
effective judicial remedies for the right to adequate housing is an immediate obligation of
States, since “there cannot be a right without a remedy to protect it”, and held that the State
had violated the obligation to provide effective remedies in the context of foreclosure
procedures.
41 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 7. See also S. Wilson,
“Breaking the tie: evictions from private land, homelessness and a new normality”, South African
Law Journal, volume 126, No. 2 (2009).
42 See, for example, City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v. Blue Moonlight Properties 39
(Pty) Ltd and Another (CCT 37/11) [2011] ZACC 33 (1 December 2011).
43 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 3 (1990) on the
nature of States Parties’ obligations.
44 See concluding observations of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights on Canada
(E/C.12/CAN/CO/4 and E/C.12/CAN/CO/5).
45 See communication No. 2/2014, I.D.G. v. Spain, Views adopted by the Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights on 17 June 2015. In its response to the questionnaire, the organization
Arrels Fundació estimates that, for every 100,000 persons, 71 are homeless in Spain.
51. Other treaty monitoring bodies and human rights mechanisms have articulated legal
standards with respect to remedies in the context of homelessness. In A.T. v. Hungary, the
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women addressed the link
between violence against women and homelessness, recommending as part of an effective
remedy to “ensure that A. T. is given a safe home in which to live with her children”.46
52. In its 2014 concluding observations on the United States, the Human Rights
Committee noted that criminalization of homeless people raises concerns of discrimination
and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.47 It recommended that the federal Government
engage with State and local authorities to abolish discriminatory laws and policies
criminalizing homelessness; intensify efforts to find solutions for people who are homeless;
and offer incentives for decriminalization to local authorities.. The federal Government
recently announced that it is implementing the recommendations, including by linking
access to federal housing grants to the repeal of local laws that criminalize homelessness.
53. The Human Rights Committee has also acknowledged that widespread
homelessness leads to serious health consequences and death and has stated that positive
measures are required under article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights on the right to life to address homelessness.48 The Committee has considered
homelessness in the context of forced evictions, finding that failure to consider that an
eviction might result in homelessness constitutes an arbitrary interference with the home.49
54. Regional human rights systems have also, to various extents, offered avenues for
effective remedies for those who are homeless. The revised European Social Charter, in its
article 31, includes the obligation “to prevent and reduce homelessness with a view to its
gradual elimination”. In European Federation of National Organisations working with the
Homeless (FEANTSA) v. France,50 the European Social Rights Committee held that “the
measures currently in place to reduce the number of homeless are insufficient, both in
quantitative and qualitative terms”, and constituted a violation of article 31.2 of the Charter.
55. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights have developed important jurisprudence recognizing the obligation of the
State to protect the special relationship between indigenous peoples and land in addressing
violations in which, for example, members of indigenous communities have been “violently
forced from their homes and traditional lands into a situation of ongoing displacement”.51 In
addition, in considering the plight of street-connected children, the Court has explained that
the right to life requires States to take positive measures to ensure access to the conditions
needed to lead a dignified life, recognizing that the right to life belongs “at the same time to
the domain of civil and political rights as well as economic, social and cultural rights”.52
56. The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights has affirmed that the right
to adequate housing is implied in the African Charter by its articles 14 on the right to
property, 16 on the right to highest attainable standard of mental and physical health and
46 See communication No. 2/2003, A.T. v. Hungary, Views adopted by the Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women on 26 January 2005, para. 9.
47 See CCPR/C/USA/CO/4.
48 See, for example, CCPR/C/79/Add.105, para. 12.
49 See communication No. 2073/2011, Liliana Assenova Naidenova et al. v. Bulgaria, Views adopted on
30 October 2012, para. 14.7.
50 Complaint 39/2006 (2007).
51 See Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Moiwana Community v. Suriname, judgement of 15 June
2015, para. 186. Available from www.corteidh.or.cr/docs/casos/articulos/seriec_124_ing.pdf
52 See Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Villagran-Morales et al. v. Guatemala, judgement of 19
November 1999. Available from www.corteidh.or.cr/docs/casos/articulos/seriec_63_ing.pdf.
18 (1) on protection accorded to the family.53 It considers that forced evictions leading to
homelessness are contrary to the Charter, and has urged all States to report on measures
taken to address homelessness and to appoint an independent national body to monitor State
compliance with the right to adequate housing.54
57. Important advances have been made in domestic jurisdictions recognizing that
homelessness violates a range of human rights. The Grundgesetz (Basic Law) of Germany
has been interpreted to ensure that adequate and humane housing is a component of a
minimum standard of living in line with human dignity.55
58. The Supreme Court of India has affirmed that the right to life “includes the right to
live with human dignity and all that goes along with it, namely, the bare necessities of life,
such as adequate nutrition, clothing and shelter”.56 The High Court of New Delhi initiated a
case on its own motion to consider whether the demolition of a temporary homeless shelter
in preparation for the 2010 Commonwealth Games had violated the right to life. The loss of
the shelter resulted in the death of one former resident. The Court ordered the Delhi
government to rebuild the shelter and to stop evicting homeless persons in winter.57
59. Claims brought by homeless people before domestic courts have led to significant
advances in many jurisdictions. In Argentina, homeless people have the right to assistance,
but it is claimed on a case-by-case basis before the court. For example, in Q. C. S. Y. v.
Government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, the National Supreme Court ordered
the Buenos Aires government to provide adequate shelter for a homeless mother and her
disabled son, noting that there should be a minimum guarantee of access to housing for
those facing situations of extreme vulnerability.
60. The Colombia Constitutional Court ordered the Municipality of Dosquebradas and
the Department of Risaralda to design a pilot programme for homeless people in line with
constitutional requirements and relevant experiences of other municipalities. The Court also
called on all relevant authorities to immediately prepare a national public policy for
homeless people in line with requirements of the national law about the rights of homeless
people.
61. The Constitutional Court of South Africa ordered the Government to devise and
implement a comprehensive and coordinated programme to realize the right to adequate
housing that prioritizes those in most urgent need.58 In the context of forced evictions, the
Court has implemented a number of protections for those threatened with homelessness,
including imposing on all levels of government a duty to meaningfully engage with
53 See resolution 231 of the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights, on the right to
adequate housing and protection from forced evictions, available from
www.achpr.org/sessions/52nd/resolutions/231.
54 See African Commission on Human and People’s Rights, Principles and Guidelines for the
Implementation of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, available from
www.achpr.org/files/instruments/economic-social-
cultural/achpr_instr_guide_draft_esc_rights_eng.pdf.
55 Response to the questionnaire from Germany.
56 See Supreme Court of India, Francis Coralie Mullin v. The Administrator, judgement dated 13
January 1981, para. 6.
57 Urban Rights Forum: With the Homeless, The Trajectory of a Struggle (2010), available from
http://hlrn.org.in/documents/SAM-BKS_The_Trajectory_of_a_Struggle.pdf.
58 See Government of the Republic of South Africa et al v. Grootboom et al, case No. CCT11/00 of
October 2000.
communities involved in resettlement and recognizing the obligations of private landlords
to ensure that no one is evicted into homelessness.59
62. In many countries, social movements are incorporating legal strategies into broader
political strategies to challenge homelessness and affirm the right to adequate housing.
Abahlali baseMjondolo, the South African shack-dwellers’ movement, and other
organizations in South Africa have developed approaches to social mobilization linked to
legal strategies to claim rights, without losing sight of the fundamentally political nature of
the struggle for adequate housing. 60
63. In Argentina, the non-governmental organization Centro de Estudios Legales y
Sociales has integrated test-case litigation to advance the right to adequate housing for
homeless people with political initiatives, in order to change the way land, property and
housing is distributed and ensure broader access to justice. The newly adopted Law for the
Province of Buenos Aires on Access to Dignified Habitat affirms a number of guiding
principles, including the right to the city, the social function of property, meaningful
democratic participation and equitable sharing of benefits of urbanization.
64. The Special Rapporteur is encouraged by the proliferation of locally based initiatives
to create more robust human rights frameworks, programmes, policies and laws, whether
they take the form of new constitutional rights, charters on the right to the city/human rights
city, local ordinances or enhanced mandates for human rights institutions and
ombudspersons. Much more is needed, however. The implementation of a human rights
framework for governance at all levels is the most critical component of any strategy for the
elimination of homelessness.
VII. Metrics of homelessness and human rights accountability
65. Measuring the extent of homelessness among different groups helps to assess
priorities, ensure effective design and implementation of policy responses and determine
whether States are meeting their human rights obligations. According to the Committee on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, States have an obligation to measure the extent of
homelessness, using data disaggregated by gender, race and other relevant characteristics,
and to establish effective means of monitoring progress.61
66. Beyond national measures of homelessness, there is also a need for global
indicators. Addressing homelessness should be a central part of global development goals.
While the Sustainable Development Goals omit any explicit reference to homelessness,
target 11.1 of the Goals commits States to ensure access for all to adequate, safe and
affordable housing and basic services and upgrading slums by 2030. Measuring and
committing to reduce and eliminate homelessness with clear benchmarks and timelines will
be critical to the successful realization of this target.
67. There are, however, serious challenges in measuring homelessness, both within
States and globally, that need to be addressed. It has proven difficult to secure accurate and
comparable data from all States in order to develop reliable global data. The Statistics
Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs has noted that data on the
59 See City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v. Blue Moonlight Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd and
Another, case No. CCT 37/11, paras. 46, 54 and 57.
60 See Jackie Dugard et al., “Rights-compromised or rights-savvy? The use of rights-based strategies to
advance socio-economic struggles by Abahlali baseMjondolo, the South African shack-dwellers’
movement”, Social and Economic Rights in Theory and Practice (2014).
61 See the Committee’s general comment No. 4 on the right to adequate housing.
number of homeless households is scarce in all regions.62 Initiatives to count the number of
homeless people have often emerged organically from local communities and address
variable local conditions and challenges in different ways. Local governments, service
providers, ombudspersons and human rights institutions can play important roles in
ensuring that data are accurate and inclusive. This, however, makes it challenging to
develop common measures across cities and internationally.
68. Some States have also been reluctant to collect and provide reliable data, perceiving
it to be contrary to their interests, particularly if they are seeking to attract development or
tourism or to host mega events. Data collected by governments need to be supplemented by
information that may only be available to non-governmental organizations and community-
based organizations working directly with homeless populations.
69. The Institute of Global Homelessness has brought together researchers and civil
society organizations working on homelessness from around the world to take up these
challenges, urging a renewed commitment to achieving the most useful global measures
through the adoption of a standard approach based on collaboration with governments.63
The Special Rapporteur is hopeful that collaborative initiatives such as this will provide a
foundation for significant advances in understanding global patterns and challenges in
relation to homelessness and enhanced accountability to the obligation to eliminate it.
70. While improved statistical data will be important to guide public policy and to hold
governments accountable, adjustments will need to be made for the inevitable limitations,
omissions and possible distortions in available data. Challenges associated with measuring
homelessness should not be allowed to encourage policies that respond only to the visible
and more easily measured forms of homelessness. Homelessness among single men living
on the streets or using emergency shelters is more easily measured. It is more difficult to
measure homelessness among women, children and young people living temporarily with
family or friends, or among those most marginalized and precariously housed within
informal settlements, who may be altogether left out of census or data collection. It is
equally difficult to identify and measure homelessness among indigenous households or
communities displaced from ancestral lands. Members of ethnic minorities may not wish to
be identified by authorities. In Kenya, for instance, many of the people who become
homeless because of ethnic violence did not want to be identified for fear of reprisal.64
Policy responses and assessments of progress in eliminating homelessness must make
allowances for less visible dimensions of homelessness that may not have been measured.
71. It is also important to supplement data on services used by homeless people with
estimates of those who are homeless but do not access services. When homelessness is
assessed by counting the number of people sleeping in shelters or using services,
improvements in those services may appear to increase the number of homeless, when in
fact lower numbers simply reflect some improvements in meeting emergency needs. On the
other hand, some cities have denied services as a punitive means of attempting to reduce
the numbers of homeless in their jurisdiction. In those cases, lower numbers of people in
homeless shelters is evidence of a serious violation of human rights. It is always important,
therefore, to look behind numbers. Policies and accountability measures based exclusively
on raw numbers are inadequate or incomplete from a human rights standpoint. Raw
62 See http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/dyb/techreport/hhchar.pdf, para. 68.
63 See Institute of Global Homelessness, “A global framework for understanding and measuring
homelessness” (2015), available from http://works.bepress.com/dennis_culhane/188.
64 See V. Metcalfe et al., Sanctuary in the city? Urban displacement and vulnerability in Nairobi
(London, 2011), available from www.rescue.org/sites/default/files/resource-file/
Sanctuary%20in%20the%20City.pdf.
numbers may perpetuate exclusion and invisibility and fail to identify changes in the nature
or experience of homelessness.
72. For this reason, the Special Rapporteur underlines the critical importance of
qualitative evidence, including, for example, oral testimony, photographs or videos. A
human rights-based measurement of homelessness should focus on prevention and on
addressing underlying causes, and qualitative information capturing actual experiences
often reveals more about how to prevent or solve it than numbers alone.65 It is also vital to
understand the trajectories into and out of homelessness, with longitudinal analysis of how
people become homeless, how long they are homeless and how they escape from it to
supplement point-in-time counts.
73. A human rights approach to effective measurement must involve genuine
consultation with stakeholders. For some groups, statistical invisibility or being excluded
from a census is experienced as marginalization and likely to lead to neglected needs in
programmes and legislation. For other groups, however, such as street-connected young
people or irregular migrants, being identified by government authorities may be
threatening. Homeless people are best placed to ensure that methods of measurement are
accurate and inclusive and at the same time sensitive to their circumstances.
VIII. Strategic policy responses to homelessness
74. The Special Rapporteur’s consultations suggested that, while effective policy
responses depend on particular circumstances, effective strategies must always be multi-
pronged, engage a range of policies and programmes and address simultaneously social
exclusion and housing deprivation. Most importantly, strategies must be led by
stakeholders, combining social mobilization with legislative and policy reform.
75. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has focused on the need
for comprehensive housing strategies to address homelessness, framed around the right to
housing and ensuring monitoring and accountability with goals, timelines and complaints
procedures. Similarly, in the case of street children, the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights advocates a holistic approach that recognizes rights as interdependent
and interconnected, through a coordinated approach across government departments and
with the involvement of family and community.66
76. Housing First has recently emerged as a dominant model for responses to
homelessness in countries such as Belgium, Denmark, Hungary, the Netherlands, Portugal,
and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The model is
straightforward, providing chronically homeless people, for example, those with
psychosocial disabilities, with housing and support as needed.67 There are obvious benefits
of keeping people in their communities as opposed to providing treatment services without
housing, and this model offers easily measured outcomes. At the same time, concerns have
been raised that Housing First may not serve as a generalized model as it tends to focus on
65 Institute of Global Homelessness, “A global framework for understanding and measuring
homelessness” (2015), available from http://works.bepress.com/dennis_culhane/188/.
66 See A/HRC/19/35, para. 30.
67 Lars Benjaminsen, “Policy review update: results from the Housing First-based Danish homelessness
strategy”, European Journal of Homelessness, vol. 7, No. 2 (December 2013), available from
www.feantsaresearch.org/IMG/pdf/lb_review.pdf.
visible forms of homelessness and does not address systemic causes of homelessness or
ensure rehabilitation and production of affordable housing.68
77. National homelessness strategies have relied on legislation to clarify government
obligations. Scotland enacted the Homelessness etc. (Scotland) Act in 2003, which includes
the commitment to make housing a legal right by 2012. In keeping with this, an order was
passed by the Scottish Parliament in 2012 that ensures that all individuals assessed to be
“unintentionally homeless” have a right to settled accommodation.69
78. In many countries, national human rights institutions are able to investigate
allegations of human rights violations related to homelessness and make recommendations
to relevant authorities to design public policy and to remedy those violations. For the first
time, the Human Rights Commission of Mexico City held a public hearing with groups of
homeless people, then issued a report that focused on their human rights situation, including
discrimination, criminalization and other human rights issues.70
79. The Norwegian Refugee Council has canvassed a number of housing alternatives to
prevent and address homelessness for internally displaced persons. Options include
incremental housing — providing land or a basic house for the recipient to upgrade over
time; housing purchase certificates; social housing; the transfer of public buildings to
private ownership; rental support; incremental tenure — starting from administrative
recognition then legal recognition, developmental recognition to establishment of towns or
districts; neighbourhood upgrades; and support for municipalities.71
80. Homeless people have begun to reassert their identity through human rights claims
through both social movements and legal action. In South Africa, the shack-dwellers’
movement, Abahlali, has emerged as a vibrant social movement, claiming the right to
housing through both legal and political means. In Uganda, the Uganda Network on Law,
Ethics and HIV/AIDS provides free legal representation for homeless widows dispossessed
of their homes and properties as a result of discriminatory property and inheritance laws.72
In the Simon Community in northern Belfast, homeless people, with the assistance of the
organization Participation and the Practice of Rights, launched the Homelessness Action
Charter to promote the human rights of homeless people.73 In Canada, homeless people and
supportive organizations challenged as unconstitutional national and subnational
governments’ failure to effectively address homelessness,74 while simultaneously lobbying
for legislation75 to create a national homelessness and housing strategy. In the United
States, homeless peoples’ organizations have systematically and successfully challenged
laws and policies that criminalize homelessness and have lobbied for federal, State and
municipal housing strategies. In El Salvador, local community members formed a national
68 Response to questionnaire from the Danish Institute for Human Rights.
69 See www.gov.scot/News/Releases/2012/11/tackling-homelessness21112012.
70 Comisión de Derechos Humanos del Distrito Federal, Informe especial: Situación de los derechos
humanos de las poblaciones callejeras en el Distrito Federal 2012-2013 (Mexico City, 2014),
available in Spanish from http://cdhdfbeta.cdhdf.org.mx/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/poblaciones-
callejeras-integrado-imprenta.pdf. Executive summary in English.
71 See Norwegian Refugee Council et al., “Home sweet home: housing practices and tools that support
durable solutions for urban IDPs” (Geneva, Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, March 2015),
pp. 25-51.
72 See www.uganet.org/site/women-property-rights.
73 Response to the questionnaire from the organization Participation and the Practice of Rights, United
Kingdom.
74 See Tanudjaja v. Canada (Attorney General), 2014 ONCA 852.
75 See Bill C-400, an act to ensure secure, adequate, accessible and affordable housing, available from
https://openparliament.ca/bills/41-1/C-400/.
commission for residents to advocate for housing rights alongside other civil society
organizations.76
81. There are diverse models for ensuring participation of stakeholders in strategies to
address homelessness. Brazil, for example, has created a participatory model for social
policy that relies on policy councils of stakeholders. In Munich, Germany, special units for
the prevention of homelessness have provided support in preventing evictions or
repossessions.77 In Europe, FEANTSA has organized and advanced rights claims on behalf
of homeless people in a wide range of legal and political forums.
82. There is no universal policy or legislative solution to homelessness. It must be
addressed in multiple ways, engaging with the structural causes of homelessness in
particular circumstances. Any chosen policy must address issues faced by different groups
and support individuals in their own personal struggles. The FEANTSA survey of strategies
finds that effective strategies must be evidence-based, comprehensive, multi-dimensional,
rights-based, participatory, based on statutes or legislation, sustainable, needs-based and
bottom-up.
83. All levels of government should design and implement policies, laws and strategies
to prevent and remedy homelessness. Failure to do so reflects that homelessness has neither
been recognized nor addressed as a violation of human rights. What is lacking at all levels
is a shared commitment to ensuring the enjoyment of the right to adequate housing — and
related rights such as life and health. As the Consortium for Street Children has stated, “the
greatest challenge for all street-connected children is being identified and treated as a rights
holder”.78
84. Since ensuring the enjoyment of human rights is a firm legal responsibility of all
levels of government, policymakers can be compelled to incorporate human rights into their
laws, policies and programmes, such as: consulting with homeless people throughout the
policy development and implementation process; incorporating measureable goals and
timelines into strategies; including monitoring and review mechanisms to ensure successful
outcomes; and providing homeless people with a mechanism through which to claim their
rights and with access to remedies. These are essential requirements for there to be
meaningful inclusion of homeless people in the human family, restoring to them dignity,
respect and protection under the rule of law.
IX. Conclusions and recommendations
85. Widespread homelessness is evidence of the failure of States to protect and
ensure the human rights of the most vulnerable populations. It is occurring in all
countries, regardless of the phase of development of their economic or governance
systems, and it has been occurring with impunity. The nature and scope of
homelessness globally suggests society’s lack of compassion for the full scale of
deprivation and loss of dignity associated with being homeless. It is a phenomenon
requiring urgent and immediate action by the international community and by all
States.
86. Homelessness is one of the least examined consequences of unabated inequality,
unfair distribution of land and property and poverty occurring on a global scale. It is
a result of State acquiescence to real estate speculation and unregulated markets — a
76 Response to the questionnaire from the organization FUNDASAL, El Salvador.
77 See European Commission, “Homelessness during the crisis”, Research note 8/2011 (2011), p. 16.
78 Response to the questionnaire from the organization Consortium for Street Children.
result of treating housing as a commodity rather than as a human right. It is rooted in
a global privileging of wealth and power, and scapegoating and scorning of those who
do not have a home.
87. Homelessness disproportionately affects particular groups, including women,
young people, children, indigenous peoples, people with disabilities, migrants and
refugees, the working poor, and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, each in
different ways, but with common structural causes. These include: (a) the retreat by
all levels of government from social protection and social housing and the
privatization of services, infrastructure, housing and public space; (b) the
abandonment of the social function of land and housing; (c) the failure to address
growing inequalities in income, wealth and access to land and property; (d) the
adoption of fiscal and development policies that support deregulation and real estate
speculation and prevent the development of affordable housing options; and (e), in the
face of urbanization, the marginalization and mistreatment of those who are most
precariously housed in informal settlements, living in temporary overcrowded
structures, without access to water, sanitation or other basic services and living under
the constant threat of eviction.
88. Instead of being treated as a group of rights bearers whose rights have been
systematically violated, homeless people have become a stigmatized group subject to
criminalization, discrimination and social exclusion. To be homeless is to experience
acts of violence, a shortened life span and ill-health and to be criminalized for survival
strategies for eating or sleeping in public space. Homeless people are rendered
voiceless and invisible, banished to the peripheries of cities and towns, out of sight.
Their humanity and dignity are rarely considered in legislation, public policies and
strategies.
89. Failures to measure and document homelessness effectively, including in its less
visible forms and in its more qualitative dimensions, have contributed to the lack of
State-led or global responses. The absence of any reference to homelessness in
development goals attests to the continued marginalization of homeless people.
90. From a human rights perspective, State obligations in relation to homelessness
are well established and have been clearly articulated. These include the following
immediate obligations of States: (a) to adopt and implement strategies to eliminate
homelessness, with clear goals, targets and timelines; (b) to eliminate the practice of
forced eviction, especially where it will lead to homelessness; (c) to combat and
prohibit in law discrimination, stigma and negative stereotyping of homeless people;
(d) to ensure access to legal remedies for violations of rights, including for the failure
of States to take positive measures to address homelessness; and (e) to regulate third-
party actors so that their actions are consistent with the elimination of homelessness
and do not discriminate either directly or indirectly against homeless people.
91. In line with the present conclusions, the Special Rapporteur offers the following
recommendations to States:
(a) All States must commit to eliminating homelessness by 2030 or earlier if
possible, in a manner that upholds international human rights and in keeping with
target 11.1 of the Sustainable Development Goals;
(b) All States must develop and implement, on an immediate basis,
coordinated rights-based strategies to prevent and eliminate homelessness. Those
strategies must include measureable goals and timelines; be developed and
implemented in consultation and collaboratively with stakeholders; make explicit
reference to international human rights law, including the right to adequate housing
and non-discrimination; include monitoring and review mechanisms to ensure
progress; and incorporate claiming mechanisms for alleged violations of human
rights, including failures of States to adequately implement required strategies;
(c) Homelessness strategies must be cross-sectoral, clearly allocate and
coordinate responsibilities of all levels of government and address the structural
causes of homelessness, including those that are particular to the needs of
marginalized or vulnerable groups;
(d) More reliable measures of homelessness, inclusive of less visible forms of
homelessness and its qualitative dimensions, must be developed. Data collection
methodologies should combine longitudinal analysis of homelessness with point-in-
time counts. Beyond adopting definitions and methodologies suited to local
circumstances, States and subnational governments should apply internationally
agreed upon definitions, methodologies and indicators to permit a more objective
assessment of progress made, including with respect to target 11.1 of the Sustainable
Development Goals;
(e) Any and all laws or measures that criminalize, impose fines on or restrict
homeless people or behaviour associated with being homeless, such as sleeping or
eating in public spaces, must be immediately repealed;
(f) Homeless people must be recognized as a protected group in all relevant
domestic anti-discrimination and hate-crime laws, including where relevant in
national Constitutions, national and subnational human rights legislation and in city
charters;
(g) A careful review of existing legislation and policies must be undertaken
to ensure that those that include discriminatory intent or effect against people who are
homeless are repealed or amended, in compliance with international human rights
law. Funding or transfer payments for local programmes should be made conditional
on the elimination of all laws that criminalize or discriminate against homeless
persons;
(h) Homeless people must be ensured access to hearings and effective
remedies for violations of their rights, including as a result of the failure of States to
take reasonable measures within the maximum available resources to eliminate
homelessness. Class or group actions should be facilitated where possible and effective
remedies should be available in multiple forums, including courts, administrative
tribunals and national human rights institutions;
(i) National and local governments must re-engage and recommit to their
role of providing social protection and ensuring access to affordable housing for
marginalized and vulnerable groups, reaffirming that housing is a human right rather
than a commodity. Subnational governments must have access to adequate resources
to meet their allocated responsibilities;
(j) Any evictions that may result in homelessness, including those intended
to render homeless people less visible, such as to promote tourism or facilitate mega
events, must be recognized under domestic law as gross violations of human rights
and be immediately stopped. Forced evictions must not occur without prior
meaningful consultation with affected groups, an exploration of all alternatives,
including in situ upgrading, and the implementation of agreed-upon resettlement
options for those affected;
(k) Special attention must be directed to homelessness among indigenous
peoples caused by displacement from land and resources and the destruction of
cultural identity. Indigenous peoples should be provided with resources to implement
programmes to address homelessness in both urban and rural contexts, consistent
with the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
92. The Special Rapporteur offers the following recommendations to other actors
(a) The media, including journalists, editorial boards, producers and
owners, must ensure that homeless people are never depicted in a discriminatory or
hateful manner. Oversight and regulation in this regard is needed;
(b) Humanitarian assistance must not be conditional on place of residence
prior to conflict or natural disaster. Property titles or other documents that are often
not available to people who are homeless should not be a barrier to receiving
emergency and longer-term humanitarian assistance;
(c) Lawyers and advocates must work closely with homeless people and
their representatives to ensure that homelessness is addressed as a human rights
violation through any available avenues. The judiciary must develop its capacity and
commitment to adjudicating these claims, including where the claims seek a remedy
requiring positive measures. In this context, States must refrain from adopting
positions in litigation that are contrary to international human rights law.