Public Health Impacts of Criminalizing Homelessness

In June 2024, the United States Supreme Court ruled that cities can penalize unhoused individuals for sleeping in public spaces, even when there are insufficient shelter beds available. This landmark decision from the nation’s highest court effectively criminalizes unsheltered homelessness and may worsen public health challenges for an already underserved population.


This analysis found strong evidence that involuntary displacement of people experiencing homelessness exacerbates health conditions by disrupting access to healthcare, treatment, and social services.

Year: 2025
Resource Type:
Journal Article
Report
Submission/Statements
Themes:
Alternatives to Criminalisation
Cost of Exclusion
Courts Systems
Fees and Fines
#PoorNotGuilty
Public Health
Use of Public Spaces
Region:
North America
Country(ies):
United States
People Groups:
Children & Young People
Duty Bearers
LGBTQIA+ persons
Marginalised Ethnic Persons
People affected by Displacement (including migrants and refugees)
People who use Drugs
People experiencing Homelessness or live in informal settlements
People experiencing Poverty
Women and Girls
Approach:
Advocacy
Law Reform
Policy Reform