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The Hobo: The Sociology of the Homeless Man

Chapter 52: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

A field-based sociological study of homeless migratory men that draws on participant observation and interviews to describe their daily strategies, itinerant labor patterns, and informal economies. It charts the social order of transient communities—norms, mutual aid, leadership, and sources of conflict—and examines interactions with employers, charities, and municipal agencies. The analysis links environmental and economic pressures to patterns of mobility and marginality and outlines practical considerations for social services and urban policy responses.

FOOTNOTES:

[13] Final Report of the Commission on Industrial Relations (1915), pp. 163-64.

[14] B. Seebohm Rountree, Unemployment; A Social Study. London, 1911. See especially chap. vii, “Detailed Descriptions of Selected Families,” where the demoralizing effects of unemployment upon the laborer are clearly indicated.

[15] Final Report of the Commission on Industrial Relations (1915), p. 157.

[16] See Bibliography, p. 287.

[17] The Individual Delinquent, pp. 776-79.

[18] One Thousand Homeless Men, pp. 88-89.

[19] L. M. Terman, The Measurement of Intelligence, p. 18.

[20] Rudolph Pintner and H. A. Toops, “Mental Tests of Unemployed Men,” Journal of Applied Psychology, I (1917), 325-41; II (1918), 15-25.

[21] “Unemployment and Feeble-mindedness,” Journal of Delinquency, II (1917), 59-73.

[22] Herman M. Adler, “Unemployment and Personality—A Study of Psychopathic Cases,” Mental Hygiene, I (January, 1917), 16-24.

[23] R. E. Park and H. A. Miller, Old World Traits Transplanted, p. 27.

[24] Rexford Tugwell, “The Gypsy Strain,” Pacific Review, pp. 177-78.