Please join us on 11/21 from 9-11 am for our next virtual HPRI Research Symposium on American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) Homelessness : https://lnkd.in/gECtbsdR The American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) Homelessness Symposium will bring together leaders, scholars, and advocates to discuss Indigenous homelessness through the lenses of innovative legal frameworks, human rights, Indigenous conceptions of home/belonging, and transformative systems change. Dr. Andrea Garcia, Mayoral Appointed Commissioner for the Los Angeles City/County Native American Indian Commission, will serve as moderator, guiding the event as we explore the unique challenges of Indigenous homelessness within the context of ongoing settler colonialism, and what emerging housing and service approaches are being used to respond to this crisis. The symposium will feature presentations from Dr. Cathy Fournier, who will examine Canada’s definition of Indigenous homelessness and its broader implications in policy and research, and Joseph Berra, who will lead an exploration of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and its connection to housing rights and the LandBack movement. Both of these presentations will be complemented by panel discussions that will center Indigenous experience, highlight culturally informed services to native communities, address the responsibilities of researchers collecting or working with native data, and outline the systems-level changes necessary to respond to intergenerational trauma and health disparities faced by indigenous communities in LA. These conversations will help us build a collective vision of a future in LA where home is more than housing, and encompasses cultural safety and a place where healing can begin. Please join us in this vital dialogue that builds on the incredible work of Indigenous scholars, front line providers, community based organizations, and community members. We hope to see you there! Register here: https://lnkd.in/gECtbsdR More info: https://lnkd.in/gHdM_zsv
Homelessness Policy Research Institute
Research Services
Los Angeles, California 2,512 followers
A collaborative of 100 researchers, policymakers, service providers, and experts with lived experience of homelessness.
About us
Established with support from the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation and the Home For Good Funders Collaborative, the Homelessness Policy Research Institute (HPRI) is a collaborative of over one hundred researchers, policymakers, service providers, and experts with lived experience of homelessness that accelerate equitable and culturally informed solutions to homelessness in Los Angeles County by advancing knowledge and fostering transformational partnerships between research, policy and practice.
- Website
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www.hpri.usc.edu
External link for Homelessness Policy Research Institute
- Industry
- Research Services
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- Los Angeles, California
- Type
- Partnership
- Founded
- 2017
- Specialties
- RFP Services, Research Collaboration, Program Evaluation, Rapid Response Research, Data Collection, Qualitative Research, Policy Research, Literature Reviews, Consulting, Convening, and Statistical Analyses
Locations
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Primary
669 W 34th St
Suite 201
Los Angeles, California 90089, US
Employees at Homelessness Policy Research Institute
Updates
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Homelessness Policy Research Institute reposted this
LA is losing ground: Nearly 1 in 4 Angelenos wish they could move elsewhere given the rise in rent, and two-thirds see an unhoused person daily. The latest LABarometer study by USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences highlights how affordability and homelessness are reshaping life in the city. 🏡
Homelessness, high rents weigh heavily on Angelenos
https://dornsife.usc.edu/news
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The latest LA Barometer findings are now out! Our HPRI team, led by Jared Schachner, collaborated closely with CESR on this important poll to bring valuable insights into Angelenos’ perspectives on housing and homelessness. This study underscores the differing views between renters and homeowners and highlights homelessness as a widespread and shared experience across our community. One notable finding shows nearly 1 in 10 Angelenos have experienced homelessness, and the majority expressed strong support for affordable housing and mental health solutions. 🔗LA Times: "What should L.A. do about homelessness? Renters and homeowners answer differently, poll finds" by Liam Dillon: https://lnkd.in/gg_NAekR 🔗LAist: "Most Angelenos say the crisis is ever-present," by David Wagner: https://lnkd.in/gfCRceAW We'll continue reposting updates from CESR, Dornsife, and others in the coming days to keep the conversation going.
What should L.A. do about homelessness? Renters and homeowners answer differently, poll finds
latimes.com
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We would like to share two job opportunities from the Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count Demographic Survey and Youth Count, a partnership between the USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work and the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA). These roles play a crucial part in the 2025 Homeless Count, aimed at surveying homeless youth, adults, and families across LA County. Positions: Data Collector, Team Lead, Driver Employment Dates: Dec 2, 2024 – Mar 14, 2025 Apply by: November 13, 2024 For more details and how to apply, please refer to the attached PDF or contact Amy Stein at [email protected].
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It's tomorrow!
Please join us on 9/24 from 9-11 am for our next virtual HPRI Research Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8 In 2020, both the City and County of Los Angeles County identified “unaccompanied” women experiencing homelessness as a unique subpopulation among people experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles, and the County of Los Angeles commissioned a countywide women’s needs assessment. In fall 2022, nearly 600 women experiencing homelessness as individuals completed surveys intended to capture information about their experiences of homelessness, barriers to housing and shelter, and what they are looking for in housing and the homelessness response system. The 2022 Los Angeles County Women’s Needs Assessment follows seven additional reports supported by Downtown Women’s Center tracking the needs of women experiencing homelessness for the last twenty years. Please join the research experts, local leaders, and advocates of women experiencing homelessness as individuals for a conversation about the Los Angeles County Women’s Needs Assessment findings and its programmatic and policy implications. Register here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8 More info: https://lnkd.in/gzCemTAy
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We are excited to share that Suzette Shaw will be joining our 9/24 HPRI Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment as a moderator! (Register for the symposium here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8) Displaced to Skid Row over a decade ago, Suzette has volunteered with the Downtown Women’s Center in one capacity to another. Whether washing dishes, serving food, sorting and ironing clothes, sitting in the day center having lunch with the other women, advocating for policy changes through the DVHSC, volunteering annually with the Homeless Count through the Homeless Count with DWC, taking a lead role In S.C.A.L.E and Project 100, volunteering with administering, research or sharing my story with the DWAC Needs Assessment for the last decade and now a student in the Watts School of Social Work at Arizona State University in Community Advocacy/ Social Policy with a minor in Organizational Leadership Development, she uses her grassroots efforts to be a voice for change. Her platform is: "We can no longer talk about equality and empowerment while enforcing inequities".....
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We are excited to share that Rowena Magana will be joining our 9/24 HPRI Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment! (Register the symposium here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8) Rowena Magana has over 20 years of experience working in the homeless services and healthcare fields. She has been with the Homeless Initiative Office within the Los Angeles County Chief Executive Office since 2017. Rowena focuses on homeless outreach strategies; special populations, such as women and older adults; and strengthening partnerships between County departments, homeless service providers, cities, and other stakeholders. Prior to her current role, she worked for the County Department of Health Services in government relations and homeless services. Rowena earned a Master’s degree in Public Administration from the University of Southern California and a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the University of California, Santa Barbara.
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We are happy to welcome Sofia Herrera to join our 9/24 HPRI Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment! (Register the symposium here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8) Sofia Herrera, PhD is the director of research, planning, and policy at the Hub for Urban Initiatives, a nonprofit consulting entity in Pasadena, California. She is one of the co-principal investigators leading the Los Angeles County Women's Needs Assessment. Dr. Herrera has led and worked on many homeless counts, participatory action research projects, and strategic plans in the field of homelessness for several jurisdictions in California. Through her work, she is committed to continuously promoting trauma-informed services and gender equity in policy, programmatic approaches, and service delivery. Since 2016, Dr. Herrera has chaired the Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count Advisory Board at the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority. She is also a past grantee and then a member of the research and steering committees at the Homelessness Policy Research Institute (HPRI) at the University of Southern California. Trained as a clinical psychologist in the research-practitioner model, Dr. Herrera is licensed in California. She holds a faculty appointment as associate research professor at the Fuller Graduate School of Psychology in Pasadena, California. In past years, she was the research coordinator of the Fuller Youth Initiative for Violence Prevention and Positive Youth Development, an extensive research program at the Fuller Graduate School of Psychology funded by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, U.S. Dept. of Justice. Dr. Herrera has also researched the impact of community violence exposure and traumatic experiences on youth and school teachers domestically and in Central America. She also consults with organizations conducting program evaluations in the United States and internationally.
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We are excited to welcome Samantha Batko as a panelist for our 9/24 HPRI Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment! (Register the symposium here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8) Samantha Batko is a senior fellow and practice area lead for the Preventing and Ending Homelessness practice area in the Metropolitan Housing and Communities Policy Center at the Urban Institute. Her research focuses on homelessness, housing instability, housing assistance, and supportive services. She has developed expertise on homelessness and housing over a 19-year career in the sector that has included research, federal policy, and technical assistance and training. She has expertise in several primary homelessness programs including homelessness prevention, emergency shelter, rapid re-housing, and permanent supportive housing. She is currently the principal investigator of Urban’s Housing Justice Hub, the US Department Housing and Urban Development’s Pay for Success permanent supportive housing demonstration evaluation, and the evaluation of Denver’s All in Mile High Initiative. Other current projects include the US Department of Health and Human Services Runaway and Homeless Youth Learning Agenda and case studies of Emergency Housing Voucher programs. Past projects have included the evaluation of Tipping Point Community’s Chronic Homelessness Initiative in San Francisco, the Los Angeles County Unaccompanied Women Experiencing Homelessness Needs Assessment, the development of the Emergency Rental Assistance Priority Index, and evaluation of the State of New Jersey’s Keeping Families Together supportive housing program. Batko sits on the State of California Interagency Council on Homelessness Advisory Board, the National Alliance to End Homelessness Research Council, The Homelessness Policy Research Institute based at USC Price, the Homelessness Research Advisory Council for Portland State University, and the Homelessness Research Advisory Board for All Home California. Batko has been cited in the LA Times, Route Fifty, and The Hill multiple times; has published multiple opeds, including in The Hill and in Street Sense (Washington, DC’s “street” newspaper); is frequently a guest on NPR affiliates; and has been a guest on PBS NewsHour.
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Thrilled to share that Saba Mwine-Chang (she/her) is joining our 9/24 HPRI Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment as a moderator! Register the symposium here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8 Saba Mwine-Chang (she/her) serves as the inaugural Deputy Chief Equity Officer at the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) where she provides strategic leadership and facilitates shared vision and collaborative partnerships among LAHSA staff, Los Angeles Continuum of Care, the City of Los Angeles and the County of Los Angeles. Saba’s work at LAHSA includes fostering: culturally specific and informed healing service delivery models; data driven equity goals, metrics and implementation; equity technical assistance and guidance for service providers, staff and the public at large. Prior to LAHSA, Saba served as inaugural Managing Director of the Homelessness Policy Research Institute (HPRI), a collaborative of over one hundred researchers, policymakers, service providers and experts with lived experience of homelessness that accelerate equitable and culturally informed solutions to homelessness in Los Angeles County by advancing knowledge and fostering transformational partnerships between research, policy and practice. Under Saba’s co-direction, HPRI more than doubled in size, growing collaboratively from a start-up to an established trusted racial equity centered institute locally and across the country. Saba helped deepen policy relationships, supported anti-racist research, practice and integrated community learning spaces. Saba has over twenty years of experience spearheading housing justice work throughout the nation. At the Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH), she worked to establish their first racial equity initiatives via fundraising, designing grant programming, developing and delivering transformative learnings, and guiding community initiatives. Under the Obama Administration, she facilitated the national Housing Discrimination Study throughout Los Angeles County and other major cities across the country, measuring access to housing based on race and other protected classes. Saba is a classically trained actor and holds a master’s of fine arts in theatre; she is committed to the arts and somatic practice as a tool for healing racial trauma and shaping community spaces. In California and nationally, Saba is a leading voice in the movement for liberatory, community engaged, culturally informed healing approaches to addressing racism—the least examined cause and perpetuator of homelessness.