Journal of The American Planning Association, 2000
ABSTRACT The study reported in this article rested connections between five land use controls and... more ABSTRACT The study reported in this article rested connections between five land use controls and the racial composition of the communities that use them. A survey of localities in the 25 largest U.S. metropolitan areas showed that low density-only zoning, which restricts residential densities to fewer than eight dwelling units per acre, consistently reduced rental housing; this, in turn, limited the number of Black and Hispanic residents. Building permit caps were also associated with lowered proportions of Hispanic residents. Other controls tested-urban growth boundaries, adequate public facilities ordinances, and moratoria-had limited effects on either housing types or racial distribution.
Page 1. Comment on Emily Talen and Julia Koschinsky's ''Is subsidized housing in s... more Page 1. Comment on Emily Talen and Julia Koschinsky's ''Is subsidized housing in sustainable neighborhoods? ... Housing Policy Debate 37 Page 6. should be used cautiously as a factor in siting low-income family housing'' (Tegeler and Chouest 2010). ...
Environment and Planning B-planning & Design, 1999
... Local governments also have a tradition of subsidizing new schools, roads, sewers, libraries,... more ... Local governments also have a tradition of subsidizing new schools, roads, sewers, libraries, and ... high house prices translate backward to high land prices, and high land prices promote ... house values from 1980, as reported by owners, and the percentage change in median ...
This article has two purposes. First, it explores the ideas of vulnerability, precariousness, and... more This article has two purposes. First, it explores the ideas of vulnerability, precariousness, and resilience as they apply to people, housing, neighborhoods, and metropolitan areas. People might be more vulnerable to shocks or strains, we propose, if they are members of racial/ethnic minorities, recent immigrants, non-high school graduates, are children or over 75 years old, disabled, recent veterans, living in
Transit-oriented development (TOD) often raises land values and can promote gentrification and th... more Transit-oriented development (TOD) often raises land values and can promote gentrification and the displacement in low-income communities. Little research, however, has shown how communities have organized to fight for more equitable TOD processes and outcomes within particular metropolitan contexts and dynamics of neighborhood change. This case study examines the role of neighborhood-based advocacy and organizing in fighting for equitable TOD and tackling key political and planning challenges in a predominantly Latinx immigrant inner-ring suburb. Their successes show the strengths of community-based, cross-sector coalitions in generating more equitable and inclusive TOD processes, plans, and policies that target conditions of place-based precarity.
Journal of The American Planning Association, 2000
ABSTRACT The study reported in this article rested connections between five land use controls and... more ABSTRACT The study reported in this article rested connections between five land use controls and the racial composition of the communities that use them. A survey of localities in the 25 largest U.S. metropolitan areas showed that low density-only zoning, which restricts residential densities to fewer than eight dwelling units per acre, consistently reduced rental housing; this, in turn, limited the number of Black and Hispanic residents. Building permit caps were also associated with lowered proportions of Hispanic residents. Other controls tested-urban growth boundaries, adequate public facilities ordinances, and moratoria-had limited effects on either housing types or racial distribution.
Page 1. Comment on Emily Talen and Julia Koschinsky's ''Is subsidized housing in s... more Page 1. Comment on Emily Talen and Julia Koschinsky's ''Is subsidized housing in sustainable neighborhoods? ... Housing Policy Debate 37 Page 6. should be used cautiously as a factor in siting low-income family housing'' (Tegeler and Chouest 2010). ...
Environment and Planning B-planning & Design, 1999
... Local governments also have a tradition of subsidizing new schools, roads, sewers, libraries,... more ... Local governments also have a tradition of subsidizing new schools, roads, sewers, libraries, and ... high house prices translate backward to high land prices, and high land prices promote ... house values from 1980, as reported by owners, and the percentage change in median ...
This article has two purposes. First, it explores the ideas of vulnerability, precariousness, and... more This article has two purposes. First, it explores the ideas of vulnerability, precariousness, and resilience as they apply to people, housing, neighborhoods, and metropolitan areas. People might be more vulnerable to shocks or strains, we propose, if they are members of racial/ethnic minorities, recent immigrants, non-high school graduates, are children or over 75 years old, disabled, recent veterans, living in
Transit-oriented development (TOD) often raises land values and can promote gentrification and th... more Transit-oriented development (TOD) often raises land values and can promote gentrification and the displacement in low-income communities. Little research, however, has shown how communities have organized to fight for more equitable TOD processes and outcomes within particular metropolitan contexts and dynamics of neighborhood change. This case study examines the role of neighborhood-based advocacy and organizing in fighting for equitable TOD and tackling key political and planning challenges in a predominantly Latinx immigrant inner-ring suburb. Their successes show the strengths of community-based, cross-sector coalitions in generating more equitable and inclusive TOD processes, plans, and policies that target conditions of place-based precarity.
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