Author Brian Goldstone on There is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 4, 2026 · 38 MIN

Author Brian Goldstone on There is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America

from WAHNcast · host Women’s Affordable Housing Network

Brian Goldstone on the Rise of the Working Homeless In this powerful WAHNcast conversation, Angie Truitt and Jean Dahlquist sit down with award-winning journalist and anthropologist Brian Goldstone, author of There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America. Through the stories of five Atlanta families, Goldstone exposes a deeply troubling and increasingly common reality: the rise of the working homeless. These are parents with full-time jobs — cleaning airports, stocking shelves, driving for Uber, caring for children and elders — who still cannot secure stable housing. They are not visible in encampments. They are not disconnected from work. They are living in cars, extended-stay hotels, doubled up with family: America’s hidden homeless. In this conversation, Brian shares: The moment he realized employment no longer protects families from homelessness How precarious work, rising rents, and broken systems intersect Why homelessness is not a charity issue but a justice issue The emotional toll of witnessing families fight daily for stability How we can move from compassion fatigue to targeted, productive anger This is not a light conversation but it is a necessary one. The paperback edition of There Is No Place for Us releases March 3 and will be available anywhere you buy books. Brian encourages readers to consider purchasing through Bookshop.org to support local independent bookstores. This episode is essential listening for everyone. 

Brian Goldstone on the Rise of the Working Homeless In this powerful WAHNcast conversation, Angie Truitt and Jean Dahlquist sit down with award-winning journalist and anthropologist Brian Goldstone, author of There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America. Through the stories of five Atlanta families, Goldstone exposes a deeply troubling and increasingly common reality: the rise of the working homeless. These are parents with full-time jobs — cleaning airports, stocking shelves, driving for Uber, caring for children and elders — who still cannot secure stable housing. They are not visible in encampments. They are not disconnected from work. They are living in cars, extended-stay hotels, doubled up with family: America’s hidden homeless. In this conversation, Brian shares: The moment he realized employment no longer protects families from homelessness How precarious work, rising rents, and broken systems intersect Why homelessness is not a charity issue but a justice issue The emotional toll of witnessing families fight daily for stability How we can move from compassion fatigue to targeted, productive anger This is not a light conversation but it is a necessary one. The paperback edition of There Is No Place for Us releases March 3 and will be available anywhere you buy books. Brian encourages readers to consider purchasing through Bookshop.org to support local independent bookstores. This episode is essential listening for everyone.

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Author Brian Goldstone on There is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America

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This episode was published on March 4, 2026.

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Brian Goldstone on the Rise of the Working Homeless In this powerful WAHNcast conversation, Angie Truitt and Jean Dahlquist sit down with award-winning journalist and anthropologist Brian Goldstone, author of There Is No Place for Us: Working and...

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