- Mixed Messages on Mixed Incomes
- Volume 15 Number 2
- Managing Editor: Mark D. Shroder
- Associate Editor: Michelle P. Matuga
Guest Editors' Introduction: Policy Assumptions and Lived Realities of Mixed-Income Housing on Both Sides of the Atlantic
James C. Fraser
Vanderbilt University
Deirdre Oakley
Georgia State University
Diane K. Levy
Urban Institute
During the past several decades, a number of housing programs sought to create mixed-income housing and neighborhoods in the United States and Europe to negate the effects of concentrated poverty. In the United States, such initiatives have included the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's Moving to Opportunity housing experiment, whereby low-income residents volunteered for relocation to low-poverty areas; the Housing Opportunities for People Everywhere (HOPE VI) Program for public housing transformation; and Choice Neighborhoods, a program broadly based on the HOPE VI model but expanded to revitalize entire neighborhoods (Fraser, Oakley, and Bazuin, 2012).
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