Established 2005 Registered Charity No. 1110656

Scottish Charity Register No. SC043760

December 2025 – January 2026 : Resolutions

December 2025 – January 2026 : Resolutions READ ONLINE
London edition (PDF 1.19MB) DOWNLOAD ISSUE 159
Scottish edition (PDF 1.19MB) DOWNLOAD ISSUE 159

RECENT TWEETS

LATEST STORIES

Information

Community service

Learn about the project in York putting people experiencing homelessness at the centre of its mission. By Hayley Johnson, a team member of Lived Insights 

Missing People : December 2025 – Janaury 2026

Missing People appeal

Scratch that

A volunteer at Arts & Homelessness International’s first Scratch Night explains what the event is. By Rhonagh O’Donnell

Winter ready

Top tips from the Groundswell team on how to best prepare for the cold winter months

News

News in Brief : Issue 159

News in brief by the Pavement Team

Features

Deja vu

On the illusion of choice and how the energy industry encapsulates so much wrong with the UK. By André Rostant

Resolutions and rays of hope

The turn of the year is a time of resolutions. Many people experiencing homelessness enter the new year with resolve and hope. By Emdad Rahman 

Sharing and caring

How sharing his experiences has helped our writer recognise and work through events and trauma from his past. By Mat Amp

Opinion

Sorry, we couldn't find any stories, try broadening your search.

Obituaries

In loving memory : Tracey O'Brien
Obituary for Tracey O'Brien
Obituary : Viki Fox
Obituary for Viki Fox

Your voice

A load of bother

Time-travelling detective O’Haggis embarks on a trip to the near future, where totalitarianism and pre-loved orgasms for sale mark a troubled era. Story by Chris Sampson 

Issue 159 : Comics

This issue's comics from our brilliant artists

Poet's story
The Man Who Walks Through Smoke

Lines on adversity, trauma, resilience and healing. Plus a tribute to jazz legend John Coltrane. Poems by Joseph Hickman and Chris Bird

Turn the page

A new book focuses on a recovery project in prison and the processing of trauma. By Denise Harrison 

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