933
Views
5
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Housing Policy in Crisis: An International Perspective

Privatization in an Era of Economic Crisis: Using Market-Based Policies to Remedy Market Failures

Pages 6-28 | Received 15 Mar 2016, Accepted 04 Dec 2016, Published online: 01 Mar 2017

References

  • Aalbers, M. B., & Christophers, B. (2014a). Centering housing in political economy. Housing, Theory & Society, 31, 373–394. 10.1080/14036096.2014.947082
  • Aalbers, M. B., & Christophers, B. (2014b). The housing question under capitalist political economies. Housing, Theory & Society, 31, 422–428. 10.1080/14036096.2014.947083
  • Ashton, P. (2009). An appetite for yield: The anatomy of the subprime mortgage crisis. Environment and Planning A, 41, 1420–1441. 10.1068/a40328
  • Bennett, L. (2011). The mayor among his peers: Interpreting Richard M. Daley. In D. R. Judd & D. Simpson (Eds.), The city, revisited: Urban theory from Chicago, Los Angeles and New York (pp. 242–272). Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Bowean, L. (2012, January 8). CHA grinds towards finish line of relocation plan. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved from http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-01-08/news/ct-met-lathrop-homes-sidebar-20120108_1_public-housing-lathrop-homes-mixed-income-communities.
  • Bratt, R. G. (1989). Rebuilding a low-income housing policy. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
  • Brenner, N., & Theodore, N. (2002). Cities and the geographies of “actually existing neoliberalism”. Antipode, 34, 349–379.10.1111/anti.2002.34.issue-3
  • Chaskin, R. J. & Joseph, M. L. (2015). Integrating the inner city. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.10.7208/chicago/9780226303901.001.0001
  • Chaskin, R. J., Joseph, M. L., Voelker, S., & Dworsky, A. (2012). Public housing transformation and resident relocation: Comparing destinations and household characteristics in Chicago. Cityscape, 14, 183–214.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2000). Plan for transformation: Improving public housing in Chicago and the quality of life. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2009). FY2008 Moving to Work annual report. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2013). Plan forward: Communities that work. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2014a). Development financing overview. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2014b). Comprehensive annual financial report for the year ended December 31, 2014. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2015). Quarterly report, 4th quarter 2014. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2016a). Comprehensive annual financial report for the year ended December 31, 2015. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority. (2016b). Quarterly report, 4th quarter 2015. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority, & U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. (2011a). Third amendment to amended and restated moving to work demonstration agreement. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Chicago Housing Authority, & U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. (2011b). Fifth amendment to amended and restated Moving to Work demonstration agreement. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • DeFilippis, J., & Fraser, J. (2010). Why do we want mixed-income housing and neighborhoods? In J. S. Davies, & D. L. Imbroscio (Eds.), Critical urban theory (pp. 135–147). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
  • Duke, J. (2009). Mixed income housing policy and public housing residents’ “right to the city”. Critical Social Policy, 29, 100–120. 10.1177/0261018308098396
  • Fraser, J. C., Burns, A. B., Bazuin, J. T., & Oakley, D. A. (2012). HOPE IV, colonization, and the production of difference. Urban Affairs Review, 49, 525–556.
  • Fraser, J. C., Oakley, D. A., & Bazuin, J. T. (2012). Public ownership and private profit in housing. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy & Society, 5, 397–412. 10.1093/cjres/rsr036
  • Galvez, M. M. (2011). Defining “choice” in the Housing Choice Voucher program: Understanding the role of market constraints and household preferences in location outcomes. New York, NY: New York University.
  • Glaeser, E., & Gyourko, J. (2008). Rethinking federal housing policy: How to make housing plentiful and affordable. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research.
  • Glynn, S. (2009). Where the other half lives: Lower income housing in a neoliberal world. London, England: Pluto Press.
  • Goetz, E. G. (2011). Where have all the towers gone? The dismantling of public housing in U.S. cities. Journal of Urban Affairs, 33, 267–287. 10.1111/juaf.2011.33.issue-3
  • Goodman, L., Zhu, J., & George, T. (2015). The impact of tight credit standards on 2009–2013 lending. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
  • Government Accountability Office. (2010). Recovery act: Survey of state housing finance agencies’ use of the low-income housing tax credit assistance program (TCAP) and the section 1602 program. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Great Cities Institute. (2010). The great recession’s impact on the city of Chicago. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago, College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs.
  • Hackworth, J. R. (2007). The neoliberal city: Governance, ideology, and development in American urbanism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Hackworth, J. R. (2009). Destroyed by HOPE: Public housing, neoliberalism and progressive housing activism in the U.S. In S. Glynn (Ed.), Where the other half lives: Lower income housing in a neoliberal world (pp. 232–256). London, England: Pluto Press.
  • Hall, M., Crowder, K., & Spring, A. (2015). Neighborhood foreclosures, racial/ethnic transitions, and residential segregation. American Sociological Review, 80, 526–549. 10.1177/0003122415581334
  • Hanlon, J. (2010). Success by design: HOPE VI, new urbanism, and the neoliberal transformation of public housing in the United States. Environment and Planning A, 42, 80–98. 10.1068/a41278
  • Harvey, D. (2010). The enigma of capital and the crises of capitalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Hodkinson, S., Watt, P., & Mooney, G. (2012). Introduction: Neoliberal housing policy- time for a critical re-appraisal. Critical Social Policy., 31, 3–16.
  • von Hoffman, A. (2012). History lessons for today's housing policy: The politics of low-income housing. Housing Policy Debate, 22, 321–376. 10.1080/10511482.2012.680478
  • Hwang, J., & Sampson, R. J. (2014). Divergent pathways of gentrification: Racial inequality and the social order of renewal in Chicago neighborhoods. American Sociological Review, 79, 726–751. 10.1177/0003122414535774
  • Hyra, D., & Rugh, J. (2016). The U.S. great recession: Exploring its association with black neighborhood rise, decline and recovery. Urban Geography. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1080/02723638.2015.1103994.
  • Imbroscio, D. (2012). Beyond mobility:The limits of liberal urban policy. Journal of Urban Affairs, 34(1), 1–20. 10.1111/juaf.2012.34.issue-1
  • Immergluck, D. (2009). Foreclosed: High-risk lending, deregulation, and the undermining of America’s mortgage market. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Immergluck, D. (2013). Too little, too late, and too timid: The federal response to the foreclosure crisis at the five-year mark. Housing Policy Debate, 23, 199–232. 10.1080/10511482.2012.749933
  • Institute for Housing Studies at DePaul University. (2014). The state of rental housing in Cook County: Understanding neighborhood multifamily lending trends in the wake of the housing crisis. Chicago, IL: Author.
  • Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. (2009). The disruption of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program: Causes, consequences, responses, and proposed correctives. Cambridge, MA: Author.
  • Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. (2011). Rental market stresses: Impacts of the Great Recession on affordability and multifamily lending. Cambridge, MA: Author.
  • Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. (2013). America’s rental housing: Evolving markets and needs. Cambridge, MA: Author.
  • Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. (2015). The state of the nation’s housing. Cambridge, MA: Author.
  • Khare, A. T., Joseph, M. L., & Chaskin, R. J. (2015). The enduring significance of race in mixed-income developments. Urban Affairs Review, 51, 474–503.10.1177/1078087414537608
  • Kleit, R. G., Kang, S., & Scally, C. P. (2016). Why do housing mobility programs fail in moving households to better neighborhoods? Housing Policy Debate, 26, 188–209. 10.1080/10511482.2015.1033440
  • Lee, J. A. (2015). Rights at risk in privatized public housing. Tulsa Law Review, 50, 759–801.
  • Lees, L. (2008). Gentrification and social mixing: Towards an inclusive urban renaissance? Urban Studies, 45, 2449–2470. 10.1177/0042098008097099
  • Maidenberg, M. (2012, September 29). Real estate collapse cripples CHA plan to mix homeowners, renters. Crain’s Chicago Business. Retrieved from http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20120929/ISSUE01/309299971/real-estate-collapse-cripples-cha-plan-to-mix-homeowners-renters
  • Marcuse, P. (2009). A critical approach to the subprime mortgage crisis in the United States: Rethinking the public sector in housing. City & Community, 8, 351–356. 10.1111/cico.2009.8.issue-3
  • Marcuse, P. (2012). A critical approach to solving the housing problem. In N. Brenner, P. Marcuse, & M. Mayer (Eds.), Cities for people, not for profit: Critical urban theory and the right to the city (pp. 215–230). New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Marcuse, P., & Keating, D. (2006). The permanent housing crisis: The failures of conservatism and the limitations of liberalism. In R. G. Bratt, M. Stone, & C. Hartman (Eds.), A right to housing: Foundation for a new social agenda (pp. 139–162). Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
  • Martin, R. (2011). The local geographies of the financial crisis: From the housing bubble to economic recession and beyond. Journal of Economic Geography, 11, 587–618. 10.1093/jeg/lbq024
  • Miraftab, F. (2004). Public-private partnerships: The Trojan Horse of neoliberal development? Journal of Planning, 24, 89–101.
  • Moreno, L. (2014). The urban process under financialised capitalism. City, 18, 244–268. 10.1080/13604813.2014.927099
  • Peck, J., Theodore, N., & Brenner, N. (2009). Neoliberal urbanism: Models, moments, mutations. SAIS Review of International Affairs, 29, 49–66.
  • Peck, J., & Tickell, A. (1994). Searching for a new institutional fix: The after-Fordist crisis and global-local disorder. In A. Amin (Ed.), Post-Fordism (pp. 280–315). Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 10.1002/9780470712726
  • Peck, J., & Tickell, A. (2002). Neoliberalizing space. Antipode, 34, 380–404. 10.1111/anti.2002.34.issue-3
  • Rolnik, R. (2013). Late neoliberalism: The financialization of homeownership and housing rights. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 37, 1058–1066. 10.1111/1468-2427.12062
  • Sampson, R. J. ( April, 2015). Individual and community economic mobility in the great recession era: The spatial foundations of persistent inequality. Draft for presentation at the Federal Reserve conference on Economic Mobility, Washington, DC.
  • Savas, E. S. (2005). Privatization in the city: Successes, failures, lessons. Washington, DC: CQ Press.
  • Schill, M. H. (1990). Privatizing federal low income housing assistance: The case of public housing. Cornell Law Review, 75, 878–948.
  • Sites, W. (2012). God from the machine? Urban movements meet machine politics in neoliberal Chicago. Environment and Planning A, 44, 2574–2590. 10.1068/a44419
  • Smetak, A. M. (2014). Private funding, public housing: The devil in the details. Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law, 21(1), 1–62.
  • Smith, J. L. (2015). Between a rock and a hard place: Public housing policy. Journal of Urban Affairs, 37, 42–46. 10.1111/juaf.2015.37.issue-1
  • Starr, P. (1988). The meaning of privatization. Yale Law & Policy Review, 6, 6–41.
  • Urban Institute. (2015). The impact of tight credit standards on 2009–2013 lending. Washington, DC: Author.
  • U.S. Department of the Treasury and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. (2011, February). Reforming America’s housing finance market: A report to Congress. Washington, DC: Author.
  • U.S. Executive Office of the President. (1988). Privatization toward more effective government. Washington, DC: President’s Commission on Privatization.
  • Vale, L. J. (2013). Purging the poorest. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 10.7208/chicago/9780226012599.001.0001
  • Webb, M. D., Frescoln, K. P., & Rohe, W. M. (2016). Innovation in U.S. public housing: A critique of the moving to work demonstration. International Journal of Housing Policy, 16, 111–124.
  • Weber, R. (2015). From boom to bubble. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press. 10.7208/chicago/9780226294513.001.0001
  • Williams, S., Galster, G. C., & Verma, N. (2013). The disparate neighborhood impacts of the great recession: Evidence from Chicago. Urban Geography, 34, 737–763. 10.1080/02723638.2013.789624
  • Wyly, E. K., Moos, M., Hammel, D. J., & Kabahizi, E. (2009). Cartographies of race and class: Mapping the class-monopoly rents of American subprime mortgage capital. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33, 332–354. 10.1111/ijur.2009.33.issue-2

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.