2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2016.03.003
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Unending foreclosure crisis: Uneven housing tenure trajectories of post-REO properties

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…First, like Las Vegas and Phoenix, Orlando epitomises the housing boom and bust (Glaeser, Gyourko, and Saiz 2008). The crisis dragged on longer in Orlando than elsewhere, especially in communities of colour (Kim and Cho 2016;Raymond, Wang, and Immergluck 2016). Partly due to the diversity of the state's Latino population, the impacts in Florida differ from other regions, but remain understudied (see Cahill and Franklin 2013;Kim and Cho 2016;Strom and Reader 2013 for exceptions).…”
Section: Orlando Florida Study Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First, like Las Vegas and Phoenix, Orlando epitomises the housing boom and bust (Glaeser, Gyourko, and Saiz 2008). The crisis dragged on longer in Orlando than elsewhere, especially in communities of colour (Kim and Cho 2016;Raymond, Wang, and Immergluck 2016). Partly due to the diversity of the state's Latino population, the impacts in Florida differ from other regions, but remain understudied (see Cahill and Franklin 2013;Kim and Cho 2016;Strom and Reader 2013 for exceptions).…”
Section: Orlando Florida Study Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The crisis dragged on longer in Orlando than elsewhere, especially in communities of colour (Kim and Cho 2016;Raymond, Wang, and Immergluck 2016). Partly due to the diversity of the state's Latino population, the impacts in Florida differ from other regions, but remain understudied (see Cahill and Franklin 2013;Kim and Cho 2016;Strom and Reader 2013 for exceptions). Second, Orlando exemplifies the impending national demographic transformation to a more multi-ethnic and Hispanic suburban majority (Frey 2018).…”
Section: Orlando Florida Study Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These same discriminatory processes have influenced racial and geographic disparities in public and private disinvestment within communities. For example, the early 21st century housing crisis partially brought on by targeted marketing of subprime mortgages to Black home-buyers, resulted in a greater proportion of foreclosed and real estate owned homes in neighborhoods with a greater proportion of Black residents ( Rugh et al, 2015 ; Kim and Cho, 2016 ). Foreclosed and real estate owned homes are not as well-maintained compared to owner-occupied homes, and the proportion of these homes in a neighborhood is associated with lower perceived neighborhood quality, lower property value of nearby homes, and higher violent crime ( Immergluck and Smith, 2006 ; Immergluck, 2015 ; Leonard and Murdoch, 2009 ; Li and Walter, 2013 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neighborhood disorder potentially results from institutional forms of racial-ethnic discrimination, such as housing and mortgage-lending discrimination ( Powell, Slater, Chaloupka & Harper, 2006 ; Rugh, et al, 2015 ). Evidence from studies of the early 21st Century subprime lending and foreclosure crisis suggest racialized patterns of subprime lending, foreclosure, and real-estate-owned (REO) homes ( Howell, 2006 ; Kim & Cho, 2016 ; Rugh, 2015 ; Rugh, et al, 2015 ). Due to these race- and ethnicity-based patterns of home mortgage lending and REO, African American and Latino families lost disproportionate amounts of wealth during the most recent economic downturn ( Rugh, et al, 2015 ; Rugh, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%