Social Factors Of Homelessness

845 Words2 Pages

The article I chose was ‘Analyzing the impact social factors on homelessness: A fuzzy cognitive match approach, by Vijay K Mago, Hilary K Morden, Charles Fritz, Tiankuang Wu, Sara Namazi1, Parastoo Geranmayeh, Rakhi Chattopadhyay and Vahid Dabbaghian. It focuses on the social forces that affect homelessness and the impact they bring about. The article pays much attention to factors such as family breakdown, addiction, poor economic conditions, mental illnesses and the insufficiency of mental health facilities within communities. The key research questions were based on the specific objectives of the research, which were, are the social factors that cause homelessness related? How can these social factors be used to reduce the state of homelessness
The procedure used seems to have been efficient and very reliable since it evaluates the factors and also tests the effect they have on the independent
However, the topic at hand is a social work concept; it requires more on the field interaction with the immediate environment to gather more information instead of reviewing peer journals and gathering the information from them. They ought to have utilized the maximum advantage of the immediate surroundings in the research and this way; the research would have been more comprehensive.
Results and outcomes.
As a result of the FCM (Fuzzy Cognitive Match Approach) technique used in the article, greater extents of dynamic and complex data was gathered. This allowed the interaction of relevant and useful concepts to be manipulated and interacted with giving a more vision able picture of homelessness.
It is through the use of the network-based FCM analysis model that the key outcome or result that seemed to have stood out was that education, seems to be exerting the greatest force in the research model. Therefore, it impacts the complexity and dynamism of homelessness as a social problem (Mago et al., 2013). These results appear to be genuine and based on true data and facts gathered and analyzed by the FCM model. Basically, the results can be considered as reliable as far as the data collection procedures used are

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