Displaced and unsafe: The legacy of settler-colonial racial capitalism in the U.S. rental market

Elizabeth Korver‐Glenn, Sofia Locklear, Junia Howell, Ellen M. Whitehead
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT Unsafe rental units are disproportionately located in communities of color, resulting in numerous detrimental effects for residents’ health and socioeconomic well-being. Yet, scholars disagree regarding the mechanisms driving this phenomenon. Exogenous capitalism theories emphasize socioeconomic factors while setter-colonial racial capitalism theories emphasize the racist policies and practices that incentivize unequal investment and maintenance. We empirically adjudicate between these mechanisms by merging restricted-access versions of the American Housing Survey, the Rental Housing Finance Survey, and the American Community Survey at a Census Restricted Data Center. Our findings demonstrate neighborhood White proportion is a key mechanism shaping the condition of rental units even when controlling for neighborhood socioeconomic status, property features, and renter demographics. We argue these results support settler-colonial racial capitalism theories and discuss the implications of these findings for future research and housing policy.
流离失所和不安全:移民-殖民种族资本主义在美国租赁市场的遗产
不安全的租赁单元不成比例地分布在有色人种社区,对居民的健康和社会经济福祉造成了许多不利影响。然而,学者们对推动这一现象的机制存在分歧。外生资本主义理论强调社会经济因素,而殖民种族资本主义理论强调种族主义政策和做法,激励不平等的投资和维护。我们通过合并限制访问版本的美国住房调查、租赁住房金融调查和人口普查限制数据中心的美国社区调查,在这些机制之间进行经验判断。我们的研究结果表明,即使在控制社区社会经济地位、财产特征和租房者人口统计数据的情况下,社区白人比例也是塑造租赁单元条件的关键机制。我们认为这些结果支持定居者-殖民地种族资本主义理论,并讨论了这些发现对未来研究和住房政策的影响。
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CiteScore
4.60
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