Causes of Neighborhood Decline

I consider, next, the historical circumstances that led to the conditions that exist in communities like Woodlawn. Many authors attribute neighborhood decline to factors external to the boundaries, as opposed to those that are purely self-contained. In addition, the role of race is always explicitly or implicitly a factor. Hirsch’s (1998) striking examination of further concentration of urban renewal in Chicago highlights the extent of segregated housing markets in the 1950-1960s, which subjected rural black Southerners often to higher-cost, sub-divided housing in Chicago and white residents to block-busting and social and economic pressures to move to the suburbs. Hirsch’s work stops decade before the start of this research, but conditions he described in his work continued into the 1980s as described by Taub (1988) in the case of South Shore. Gangs took over Woodlawn, as they did in several neighborhoods, putting further pressure on middle-class residents to move.

Further, as many home-owning and middle-class (and white) families left inner-city communities, so did the commercial retailer on whom all families depended (Bright, 2000). The disappearance of employment opportunities in the city and the movement of many households away from inner black neighborhoods left black communities racially and economically isolated (Wilson, 1996). Beyond these social and economic pressures, public policy had a significant role in causing neighborhood decline: FHA and VA codification of racial bias. locational bias in mortgage lenders, federal tax deductions that privileged homeowners rather than renters, and highway construction that fueled the suburbanization of job opportunities (Massey & Denton, 1993).

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Woodlawn Background

Located on the Chicago’s South Side, Woodlawn is a neighborhood with a rich cultural and historical legacy. Lorraine Hansberry’s play “A Raisin in the Sun” depicts the Younger Family struggling to break the walls of entrenched racial segregation in Chicago. Hansberry based based the play on her family’s own personal and legal struggle to purchase a home in Washington Park, known then as West Woodlawn, in 1937. Woodlawn was a neighborhood where racial covenants would have legally prevented them from purchasing a home. Yet, by the premiere of the play in 1959, Woodlawn had essentially undergone the process of racial and socioeconomic upheaval (Taub, 1988).

Just across the Midway from the University of Chicago, Woodlawn has a strong legacy of community organizations such as The Woodlawn Organization (TWO). Unfortunately, it has become an unfortunate tragic tale of racial change in South Side Chicago. For several decades, much of Woodlawn has been plagued by social duress.

The recent push to improve smaller buildings in Woodlawn has grown out of efforts to redevelop Grove Parc. Grove Parc is one of the neighborhood’s affordable housing (Section 8) communities, notorious for its state of deterioration in recent years. Having grown out of the efforts to organize against University of Chicago’s Urban Renewal project, it has provided long-term affordable housing for low-income residents and an informal commitment from the University to forego expansion opportunities below 61st Street that is still in effect today. Grove Parc is the center of the Choice Neighborhoods revitalization initiative in Woodlawn.

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Ellen–American Murder Mystery Revisited: Do Housing Voucher Households Cause Crime?

Bibliography

Ellen, I. G., Lens, M. C., & O’Regan, K. M. (2011). American Murder Mystery Revisited: Do Housing Voucher Households Cause Crime? (SSRN Scholarly Paper No. ID 2016444). Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network.

Date Published or Accessed: 2011-12-14 2011/12/14

Link to Original Source

Reference Summary

Potential neighbors often express worries that Housing Choice Voucher holders heighten crime. Yet no research systematically examines the link between the presence of voucher holders in a neighborhood and crime. Our paper aims to do just this, using longitudinal, neighborhood-level crime and voucher utilization data in 10 large U.S. cities. We test whether the presence of additional voucher holders leads to elevated rates of crime, controlling for neighborhood fixed effects, time-varying neighborhood characteristics, and trends in the broader sub-city area in which the neighborhood is located. In brief, crime tends to be higher in census tracts with more voucher households, but that positive relationship becomes insignificant after we control for unobserved differences across census tracts and falls further when we control for trends in the broader area. We find far more evidence for the reverse causal story; voucher use in a neighborhood increases in tracts with rising crime, suggesting that voucher holders tend to move into neighborhoods where crime rates are increasing.

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Kennedy–The effect of the warranty of habitability on low income housing: milking and class violence

Bibliography

Kennedy, D. (1987). The effect of the warranty of habitability on low income housing: milking and class violence. Florida State University Law Review, 15, 485.

Date Published or Accessed: 1987-00-00 1987

Link to Original Source

Reference Summary

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