posted on 2015-06-08, 15:48authored bySarah Pink, Jennie Morgan, Andrew Dainty
The home visit—when professionals work in service users’ homes—is a growing phenomenon. It changes the configuration of home—both for home living and for those who go to work in other people’s homes. In this paper we advance recent discussions of the emotional and political geographies of home through a focus on the home visit worker and her or his experience of other people’s homes as sites of uncertainty. For such workers the home visit is played out as an interface between the private and intimate and the regulatory occupational safety and health frameworks of policy and corporate interests. It disrupts existing academic definitions of home and defines the regulatory interests of institutions. An examination of the home visit, we propose, has implications for theories of home and the search for certainties that is embedded in regulatory guidelines.
Funding
Funding was provided by the Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH).
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Published in
Environment and Planning A
Volume
47
Issue
2
Pages
450 - 464
Citation
PINK, S., MORGAN, J. and DAINTY, A.R.J., 2015. Other people’s homes as sites of uncertainty: ways of knowing and being safe. Environment and Planning A, 47 (2), pp. 450 - 464.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Publication date
2015
Notes
This article was published in the journal Environment and Planning A and is now available from SAGE Publications http://epn.sagepub.com/content/47/2/450.full.pdf+html