Homeless women are invisible not because they don’t exist – they’re hiding from danger | Nicci Gerrard

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They have often escaped domestic abuse to face a worse fate on the streets, but projects like 18 Keys can provide a safe haven

Just look, and there they are. In cities and in towns, a growing number of rough sleepers are living through another British winter; some of them will die in it. In rain and sleet and wind and long hours of darkness, in doorways, under bridges, down alleys, on benches (where bars have not been added to prevent them), in makeshift tents (if these have not been removed by authorities), in sleeping bags, with dogs for protection and companionship, with others sometimes, but mostly alone and lonely, never private but usually ignored, they are in our blind sight.

What we often do not see are the female rough sleepers. That doesn’t mean they’re not there. Street counts estimating that women account for 15%-20% of the total are almost certainly an underestimation. Women are the hidden homeless. Because they are so at risk on the streets, vulnerable to all kinds of cruelty and abuse, they tend to conceal themselves.

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