- Mixed Messages on Mixed Incomes
- Volume 15 Number 2
- Managing Editor: Mark D. Shroder
- Associate Editor: Michelle P. Matuga
Symposium
Guest Editor's Introduction
James C. Fraser, Deirdre Oakley, and Diane K. Levy
Mixed-Income Living:
Anticipated and Realized
Benefits for Low-Income
Households
Diane K. Levy, Zach McDade, and Kassie Bertumen
Ethnically Diverse HOPE VI
Redevelopments: A Community
Case Study From the Pacific
Northwest
JoDee Keller, Janice Laakso, Christine Stevens, and Cathy Tashiro
Mixed-Tenure Orthodoxy:
Practitioner Reflections on
Policy Effects
Ade Kearns, Martin McKee, Elena Sautkina, George Weeks, and Lyndal Bond
Commentary: On Spatial Solutions to
Social Problems
James DeFilippis
Commentary: Mixing Policies: Expectations
and Achievements
Hilary Silver
Making Mixed-Income
Neighborhoods Work for
Low-Income Households
James C. Fraser, Robert J. Chaskin, and Joshua Theodore Bazuin
Lessons Learned From the
Largest Tenure-Mix Operation
in the World: Right to Buy in
the United Kingdom
Reinout Kleinhans and Maarten van Ham
Commentary: Housing Policy Possibilities
in the Prison of Property
Relations: A Commentary
Katherine Hankins
Commentary: Mixed-Income Housing:
Where Have We Been and
Where Do We Go From Here?
Derek Hyra
Examining Mobility Outcomes
in the Housing Choice Voucher
Program: Neighborhood
Poverty, Employment, and
Public School Quality
Victoria Basolo
Mobility Decisions of Very
Low-Income Households
Kimberly Skobba and Edward G. Goetz
"It was really hard. ...
It was alright. ... It was easy."
Public Housing Relocation
Experiences and Destination
Satisfaction in Atlanta
Deirdre Oakley, Erin Ruel, and Lesley Reid
Commentary: Market-Driven Public Housing
Reforms: Inadequacy for
Poverty Alleviation
Amy T. Khare
Commentary: False Assumptions About
Poverty Dispersal Policies
Rachel Garshick Kleit
Commentary: Acknowledging the Structural
Features of Choice
Sudhir Venkatesh
Cityscape Mixed-Income
Symposium Summary and
Response: Implications for
Antipoverty Policy
Mark L. Joseph
Point of Contention: Homeownership and Child Well-Being
Do Kids of Homeowners Do
Better Than Kids of Renters?
Richard K. Green
The Relationship of
Homeownership, House
Prices, and Child Well-Being
Donald Haurin
The Evidence Does Not
Show That Homeownership
Benefits Children
David R. Barker
Looking Back To Move Forward
in Homeownership Research
Sandra J. Newman and C. Scott Holupka
Departments
Policy Brief: The Federal Housing
Administration and
Long-Term Affordable
Homeownership Programs
Edwin Stromberg and Brian Stromberg
Data Shop: New Data on Local Vacant
Property Registration Ordinances
Yun Sang Lee, Patrick Terranova, and Dan Immergluck
Graphic Detail: Visualizing Same-Sex
Couple Household Data
With Linked Micromaps
Brent D. Mast
Impact: Refinancing Hospital Loans
Alastair McFarlane
Industrial Revolution: Smart-Grid Technologies
in Housing
M.G. Matt Syal and Kweku Ofei-Amoh
SpAM: Changing Geographic
Units and the Analytical
Consequences: An Example
of Simpson's Paradox
Ron Wilson
Cityscape is published three times a year by the Office of Policy Development and Research (PD&R) of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Subscriptions are available at no charge and single copies at a nominal fee. The journal is also available on line at http://www. huduser.gov/periodicals/cityscape.html. PD&R welcomes submissions to the Refereed Papers section of the journal. Our referee process is double blind and timely, and our referees are highly qualified. The managing editor will also respond to authors who submit outlines of proposed papers regarding the suitability of those proposals for inclusion in Cityscape. Send manuscripts or outlines to Cityscape@hud.gov. Opinions expressed in the articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of HUD or the U.S. government. Visit PD&R’s website, www.huduser.gov, to find this publication and others sponsored by PD&R. Other services of HUD USER, PD&R’s research information service, include listservs, special interest and bimonthly publications (best practices and significant studies from other sources), access to public use databases, and a hotline (800–245–2691) for help with accessing the information you need. |