ChamberlainChris, Counting the Homeless: Implications for Policy Development, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra, 1999.
2.
National Coalition for the Homeless, How Many People are Homeless?National Coalition for the Homeless, Washington DC, 2002.
3.
See, for example, United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Concluding Observations: Canada, 1993; United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Concluding Observations: Canada, 1998.
4.
See generally, ‘The Changing Face and Causes of Homelessness: Symposium’ (2002) 15(9) Parity.
5.
LynchPhilip, ‘Begging for Change: Homelessness and the Law’ (2002) 26Melbourne University Law Review690, 692–7.
6.
LynchPhilip, above, ref 5, pp.697–701. See also National Coalition for the Homeless, Illegal to Be Homeless: The Criminalisation of Homelessness in the United States, National Coalition for the Homeless, Washington DC, 2001; National Law Centre for Homelessness and Poverty, Out of Sight, Out of Mind: A Report on Anti-Homeless Laws, Litigation and Alternatives in 50 United States Cities, National Law Centre for Homelessness and Poverty: Washington, 1999.
7.
LynchPhilip, above, ref 5, pp.701–03. See also National Coalition for the Homeless, above, ref 5; and National Law Centre for Homelessness and Poverty, above, ref 5.
8.
LynchPhilip, above, ref 5, pp.703–05.
9.
See, for example, Hate: A Compilation of Violent Crimes Committed Against Homeless People in the US in 2001, National Coalition for the Homeless, Washington DC, 2002.
10.
See generally, LynchPhilipStagollBella, ‘Promoting Equality: Homelessness and Discrimination’ (2002) 7Deakin Law Review295.
11.
BurchellSamanthaHuntEmma, ‘From Conservatism to Activism: The Evolution of the Public Interest Law Clearing House in Victoria’ (2003) 28Alternative Law Journal8, 11–12; AndersonJillRenoufGordon, ‘Legal Services “For the Public Good”’ (2003) 28Alternative Law Journal13, 15.
LynchPhilipColeJacqueline, ‘Homelessness and Human Rights: Regarding and Responding to Homelessness as a Human Rights Violation’ (2003) 4Melbourne Journal of International Law (forthcoming).
20.
FoscarinisMaria, ‘Homelessness and Human Rights: Towards an Integrated Strategy’ (2000) 19St Louis University Public Law Review327, 353.
21.
Pottinger v City of Miami 76 F3d 1154 (11th Cir 1996).
22.
Loper v New York City Police Department 999 F2d 699 (2nd Cir 1993).
23.
Mabo v Queensland (No 2) (1992) 175CLR1, 42.
24.
Kartinyeri v The Commonwealth (1998) 152ALR540, 571 (Gummow and Hayne JJ). See also Minister of State for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 183CLR273, 287–8 (MasonCJDeaneJ); Mabo v Queensland (No 2) (1992) 175CLR1, 42 (BrennanJ); Coco v The Queen (1994) 179CLR429; Dietrich v The Queen (1992) 177CLR292, 306, 321. See also United Nations Human Rights Committee, General Comment No 9, 19th Sess (1998), UN Doc HRI/GEN/1/Rev.5, 61-2.
25.
Kartinyeri v The Commonwealth (1998) 152ALR540, 598. See also Newcrest Mining Ltd v The Commonwealth (1997) 147ALR42, 148; ‘Bangalore Principles, Principle 7’ (1988) Commonwealth Law Bulletin1196, 1196.
26.
Minister of State for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 183CLR273, 291 (MasonCJDeaneJ).
27.
See, for example, FoscarinisMaria, ‘Homelessness and Human Rights: Towards an Integrated Strategy’ (2000) 19St Louis University Public Law Review327; GoldieCassandra, ‘Homelessness: A Rights-Based Agenda—Fostering Legal and Social Activism’ (March 2003) AFHO News10; LynchPhilipColeJacqueline, above, ref 19.
28.
Centre for Mental Health Policy and Services Research2001, The New York/New York Agreement Cost Study: The Impact of Supportive Housing on Services Use for Homeless Mentally Ill Individuals, Corporation for Supportive Housing, May 2001.
29.
Department of Human Services Victoria, Victorian Homelessness Strategy: Executive Summar, 2002, p.6.