Nicewonger, ToddFritz, StaceyMcNair, Lisa D.Herrmann, Victoria2022-12-052022-12-052022-06-07http://hdl.handle.net/10919/112796This brief draws on an ongoing remote ethnographic study examining how varying modes of housing insecurity are experienced by Alaskans. This includes: • an introduction to the term “houselessness,” which describes shifting modes of housing insecurity caused by socio-economic changes and unanticipated life events, but also housing shortages, difficulties acquiring land and permission for building new housing, and (especially for some Indigenous groups) the foreign nature of home financing. • reflections on the precarious living situations that Alaskans from rural communities’ experience across their lifetimes. • the need for further qualitative research that interrogates how assumptions about houselessness are experienced by Alaskans in different contexts, not least because the term houselessness is a proactive attempt to delimit narrowly defined and demeaning terms such as homelessness.Pages 9-123 page(s)application/pdfenIn CopyrightHousingAlaskaNative peoplesHouselessness: Myth vs. DataArticle - Refereed2022-12-04Arctic Winter College 2021: Policy Briefs #1- InfrastructureMcNair, Elizabeth [0000-0001-6654-2337]