Sociologists have long claimed that leaving behind high-crime, low-employment neighborhoods for the middle-class suburbs buoys the fortunes of impoverished tenants. An article in the July/August edition of The Atlantic Monthly, however, cited findings by researchers at the University of Memphis that crime in Memphis appeared to migrate with voucher recipients. More broadly, a 2006 Georgia Institute of Technology study found that every time a neighborhood experienced three foreclosures per 100 owner-occupied properties in a year, violent crime increased by approximately 7 percent.
Saturday, August 09, 2008
Demand for Subsidized Suburban Housing Outstripping Supply
The tectonic shifts in economic stratification of suburban neighborhoods assisted by federal Section 8 subsidies are challenging conventional wisdom:
Labels:
Affordable Housing,
Crime,
Crisis,
Ethnicity,
Housing Market,
Neighborhoods,
Poverty
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