Symposium articles include:
Linkages with Policy Impacts
Claudia Coulton, Michael Henderson, Francisca García-Cobián Richter,
Jeesoo Jeon, April
Urban, Michael Schramm, and Robert L. Fischer describe how Cleveland, Ohio, used parcel data,
property tax
rolls, deed and foreclosure records, housing code violations, rental registry information,
building permits,
evictions, and Housing Choice Voucher program records to evaluate lead risk in its rental housing
stock and
develop
a typology of landlords.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Mariya Shcheglovitova and Gina Lee draw on Federal Emergency Management
Agency flood
risk
maps, the U.S. Geological Survey Flood Inundation Mapping Program, and U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban
Development (HUD) administrative data to provide a methodological example of integrating federal
flooding and
housing data to gain local housing insights.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article2…
Veronica Helms Garrison, Jacqueline V. Bachand, Cindy Zhang, Christine
Cox, Cordell
Golden,
and Kimberly A. Lochner use 2015–18 National Health Interview Survey and HUD-linked data to
examine women
18–44 years old with children and renting their home who were receiving HUD assistance and a
comparison
population
of women of the same age with children, who were low-income renters but were not HUD-assisted.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article3…
Marah Curtis, Kurt Paulsen, and Hilary Shager describe recent efforts by
University of
Wisconsin-Madison researchers
to connect federal and local housing program data with the Wisconsin Administrative Data Core,
which links large
volumes of standardized, longitudinal administrative data from nearly all Wisconsin social welfare
programs,
information on incarceration from the Department of Corrections, and children’s educational
outcomes from
the
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article4…
Pooya Ghorbani, Courtney Wolf, Ben Wetzler, Simon McDonnell, Bobbetta
Davis, and Parker
Pence use publicly available data to develop a thorough Neighborhood Resource Index score to
evaluate
resource levels across various neighborhoods in New York State and then apply the score to analyze
the placement
of
low-income housing tax credit properties.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article5…
Ian Thomas and Peter
Mackie profile the Administrative Data Research Wales integrated data system and their use of data
linkage
to support homelessness policy and practice in Wales, United Kingdom.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article6…
Ownership and Displacement
Sarah Duda, Geoff Smith, and Yiwen Jiao use historical
parcel-level data from
the
Cook County Assessor’s Office to analyze changes in the housing stock of neighborhoods
throughout
Chicago,
quantify the losses in two-to-four-unit buildings, identify what happened to these properties,
and assess
the
underlying real estate market factors behind the loss of these buildings.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article7…
David M. Greenberg, Julia Duranti-Martínez, Francisca Winston, Spenser
Anderson, Jacob
Udell,
Caroline Kirk, and Richard D. Hendra use administrative data on mortgage transactions, sales
prices, housing
maintenance violations, and marshal’s evictions to investigate the effect of speculation on
tenant
outcomes in
buildings with the fastest-rising property values in New York City and explore how acquisition of
distressed
housing
by responsible owners of affordable housing may disrupt speculative cycles and contribute to
positive tenant
outcomes. Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article8…
Karen Chapple’s commentary illuminates the relationship between
investment
activity and
rental housing markets, opening up new avenues for research via strategic data linkage and
providing much-needed
evidence to support the preservation of affordable housing stock.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article9…
A commentary by Leah Hendey, Elizabeth Burton, and Kathryn L.S. Pettit
identifies three
areas to enhance the use of local administrative data based on their experiences from the National
Neighborhood
Indicators Partnership: 1) collaborating with residents and community organizations to inform
research questions
and
findings; 2) improving infrastructure around court records, zoning, and parcel data; and 3)
integrating data
across
sectors, such as health, housing, education, and others.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Evictions
Max Griswold, Lawrence Baker, Sarah B. Hunter, Jason Ward, and Cheng Ren
analyze with
spatial first differences the effect of crime-free housing policies on evictions in four locations
(Fremont,
Hayward, Riverside, and San Diego County) in California. Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Tim Thomas, Alex Ramiller, Cheng Ren, and Ott Toomet explain how data
science tools can
be used to extract records from jurisdictions with opaque eviction record keeping and illustrate
how these tools
can
supplement existing data collection practices to build a comprehensive national dataset.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Ingrid Gould Ellen, Elizabeth Lochhead, and Katherine O’Regan
address the lack of
attention to evictions in subsidized housing by leveraging multiple sources of administrative data
to analyze
patterns of nonpayment eviction filings and warrants in different types of place-based, subsidized
housing in
the
state of New York between 2016 and 2022.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Peter Hepburn's commentary describes ways the administrative data
available in
landlord-tenant court records can be accessed and analyzed to inform local decisionmaking that
addresses housing
instability. Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Developing and Improving Datasets
Linna Zhu, Michael Neal, and Caitlin Young provide a quantifiable
measure for auditing
the performance of Automated Valuation Models in majority-Black neighborhoods compared with their
majority-White
counterparts. Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Shiloh Deitz, Will B.
Payne, Eric Seymour, Kathe Newman, and Lauren Nolan address the challenges of mapping affordable
housing in
New Jersey by developing a largely automated and replicable process for precisely placing
subsidized housing
units
into tax parcels. Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Renz Torres addresses the challenge of identifying institutional
ownership in housing by
developing a graph-based analytical model designed to group and unmask anonymous corporate owners
by identifying
sums of properties held by groups of subsidiaries.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
Matthew Murphy’s commentary presents new methods researchers are
developing to
bridge
knowledge gaps and deepen our comprehension of the effects of historical and recently changed
housing policies.
Read more at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscape/vol26num1/article1…
|