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reblog: Building the Eviction Economy: Speculation, Precarity, and Eviction in Detroit — Urban Affairs Forum

And across the USA, exploitative buyers rent and sell substandard overpriced properties. Solutions: “throttle the supply of homes to bad actors… and … the implementation of tenants’ right to council. However they also suggest the need for municipal governments to enforce rental property registration and inspection requirements”

Eric Seymour and Joshua Akers | Evictions have recently gained national attention, in large part through the publication of Matthew Desmond’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Evicted. According to subsequent work from Desmond and colleagues at Princeton University’s Eviction Lab, we now know that roughly 1 in 40 renter households were evicted between 2000 and 2016, with nearly one million renter households facing eviction each year. While eviction is certainly more likely for low-income renters, Desmond’s work shows how families experiencing eviction fall even further into poverty as a result. After eviction, it becomes even more costly and difficult for already vulnerable families to find housing, hold jobs, and stay healthy.

via Building the Eviction Economy: Speculation, Precarity, and Eviction in Detroit — Urban Affairs Forum

Published by EmpathyCriticalThinking

A fictional ranger reporting on Babylon 5 history during the human Holocene Era... (for further information, please see http://ShiraDest.wordpress.com )

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