REFERENCES
- Elmendorf, C., Biber, E., Monkkonen, P., & O’Neill, M. (2019, December. Making it work: Legal foundations for administrative reform of California’s housing framework. Working paper. Davis, CA: California Environmental Law & Policy Center. Retrieved from https://law.ucdavis.edu/centers/environmental/files/Elmendorf-et-al.,-ISSUE-BRIEF-Administering-Californias-Housing-Framework-1.pdf.
- Lewis, P. G., & Marantz, N. J. (2019). What planners know: Using surveys about local land use regulation to understand housing development. Journal of the American Planning Association, 85(4), 445–462. doi:10.1080/01944363.2019.1643253
- Manville, M., Monkkonen, P., & Lens, M. (2020). It’s time to end single-family zoning. Journal of the American Planning Association, 86(1), 106–112. doi:10.1080/01944363.2019.1651216
- Monkkonen, P., Manville, M., & Lens, M. (2020). Built out cities: How California cities restrict housing production through prohibition and process. Terner Center for Housing Innovation Working Paper, UC Berkeley.
- Murray, C., & Schuetz, J. (2019, July. Is California’s apartment market broken? The relationship between zoning, rents, and multifamily development. Terner Center for Housing Innovation Working Paper, UC Berkeley. Retrieved from https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/20190711_metro_Is-California-Apartment-Market-Broken-Schuetz-Murray.pdf.
- O’Neill, M., Gualco-Nelson, G., & Biber, E. (2019). Comparing perceptions and practice: Why better land use data is critical to ground truth legal reform. Terner Center for Housing Innovation Working Paper, UC Berkeley. Retrieved from http://californialanduse.org/download/O’Neill_Comparing_Perceptions.pdf.