This paper offers some reflections on a number of methodological and person
al issues associated with researching homelessness, particularly in the Sco
ttish context. It offers with an examination of the political and social co
nstruction of statistics on homelessness. It highlights the limitations of
official data sources, and outlines the problems in quantifying (or even es
timating) the extent of one of the most extreme manifestations of homelessn
ess-rough sleeping. It identifies some other practical difficulties in cond
ucting research amongst homeless people, such as setting and meeting interv
iew targets, and questions the perceived level of risk in conducting face-t
o-face work with street homeless people. The second part of the paper consi
ders a range of ethical tensions, ethical tensions, losing a series of dile
mmas which can arise for an academic researching homelessness. If is sugges
ted that these issues and concerns could be widely applied to social policy
research, and are therefore of equal relevance to academic researchers inv
olved with any groups affected by poverty and serial exclusion. Drawing on
recent controversial practice debates, the paper questions the role of the
researcher in perpetuating the so-called "homelessness industry". Finally,
the paper argues that the researcher should seek opportunities to enhance u
ser-involvement policy, development as well as research. The paper suggests
that researchers in the field of homelessness occupy a privileged position
, providing a link between homeless people, agencies responsible for policy
and practice, and politicians. It concludes that research can make a real
contribution to understanding and alleviating homelessness. This, it argues
, is the only valid justification for making a living out of homelessness r
esearch.