Invisible People
We imagine a world where everyone has a place to call home. Each day, we work to fight homelessness by giving it a face while educating individuals about the systemic issues that contribute to its existence. Through storytelling, education, news, and activism, we are changing the narrative on homelessness.
Invisible People is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to educating the public about homelessness to create policy change for more affordable housing and support services.
Email: [email protected]

Вера, травма и лидерство: руководство мерами по борьбе с бездомностью в Сан-Диего

3000 бездомных молодых людей в Лос-Анджелесе: как решить эту проблему

Последний день бездомности этой женщины тронет вас

Homeless Hunger Games: Shelters, Soundbites, and a Sector at Breaking Point

Why Veteran Homelessness Fell and Latino Homelessness Increased

What It’s Really Like to Be Homeless in Miami

Inside CSH: Creating Housing Solutions That Help People Thrive

How Right-Wing Media Is Beating Us on Homelessness Narrative

The Screwed Scale: Why We’re at 9.7 Out of 10

Rural Homelessness Ground Zero: Inside West Virginia’s Hidden Crisis

They Got Housed — and Still Got Hurt

Why So Many Homeless People Are Black

Fined. Arrested. Still Nowhere to Live.

Housing First Didn’t Fail. We Did.

Homeless for 30 Years. He Says Being Ignored Hurts Most.

They Lived It — Now They Lead It: The Model That’s Changing Homelessness

The Hidden Crisis: Why Rural Homelessness in Canada Is Ignored

We Tested Homelessness Messaging—Here’s What Actually Works

Why Mainstream Solutions Fail Indigenous Homelessness—And What Actually Works

Homeless Senior Woman in Grants Pass: “I’m Not Here by Choice”

What If the Problem Isn’t the Homeless Tents, But the System?

How Housing After Prison Helps Everyone

Prison, Homelessness, or Housing? The Choice That Changes Everything

They Said People Don’t Want Housing. We Proved Them Wrong.

John Spent 13 Years in Prison — Now Homeless in St Louis

He Slept in a Car. Then Spent 40 Years Covering Homelessness.

They Were Once Homeless. Now, They’re Shaping Policy

Speaking the Truth in Homeless Services—Even When It Hurts

“It’s Me and Her Against the World” — Homeless in Columbus, Ohio

Why Warehousing Homeless People Doesn’t Work—And What Does