“…Pathways at the bottom of the housing market, for instance, do not reflect the singular upward trajectory implied in the 'housing career' approach. The pathways approach therefore has proved to be useful to generate 'thick description' of the turbulent dynamics in and out of situations of homelessness (see Anderson & Tulloch, 2000;De Decker & Segers, 2013;Fitzpatrick, 2000;Fitzpatrick et al, 2013;Meert & Bourgeois, 2005;Wong, 1997), refugees' housing conditions (Netto, 2011), new immigrants (Robinson et al, 2007), middle-class families' choice for urban environments (Karsten, 2007) and camping ground residents (Severinsen, 2013). Second, the housing career approach does not take into account the way in which society constructs norms and expectations about 'changes in tenure or in location'.…”