Street people
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Street people are people who live a public life on the streets of a city. Street people are frequently homelessness, homeless, sometimes mental illness, mentally ill, and often have a transient lifestyle. The delineation of street people is primarily determined by residential arrangement and their location in the urban setting.


Well-known street people

Examples of well-known street people are José María López Lledín who lived a public life on the streets of Havana during the 1950s, Mr. Butch of Boston, Leslie Cochran of Austin, Juan of Seattle, or Moondog, Louis Thomas Hardin ("Moondog") who was a street musician, inventor, and later homeless person in the 1940s through to 1970s in New York City.


Character of street people

Contemporary street people in the United States include hippy, hippies, some of whom may be beggars who often ask for spare change on the streets; bag ladies who often have all their possessions in a shopping cart which accompanies them. They also may include Street performance, street performers, and people with chronic Mental disorder, mental illness. The term street people is used somewhat loosely and may be used simply to refer to eccentric people who live in Bohemian neighborhoods.


Code of the Road

Street people are said to have an unwritten code or set of rules that govern interaction between street people. Referred to as the "Code of the Road" it emerged from the Hobo camps of the depression era to encompass urban street people. The "Code of the Road" was detailed in Xploited Magazine.


As a social problem

Poor economic and social conditions can result in accumulations of the homeless, often called street people, in certain neighborhoods. This may result in revival of vagrancy (people), vagrancy laws, or similar laws which may prohibit lying or sitting on the street. Results and attitudes vary, especially as liberal communities attempt to grapple with large numbers of the homeless."Santa Cruz Reduces Street Crime, but Its Model Is Not Cheap"
article by Scott James in ''The New York Times'' September 2, 2010, accessed September 7, 2010


Notes

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External links and further reading

*
The Rabble of Downtown Toronto
' by cartoonist Jason Kieffer, "notable street people in Toronto, himself included". Street people, Subcultures