- Gentrification
- Volume 18, Number 3
- Managing Editor: Mark D. Shroder
- Associate Editor: Michelle P. Matuga
Symposium
Guest Editor's Introduction
Ingrid Gould Ellen and Lei Ding
What Have We Learned About the Causes of Recent Gentrification?
Jackelyn Hwang and Jeffrey Lin
The Consequences of Gentrification: A Focus on Residents’ Financial Health in Philadelphia Households
Lei Ding and Jackelyn Hwang
Gentrification and Small Business: Threat or Opportunity?
Rachel Meltzer
Linking Residents to Opportunity: Gentrification and Public Housing
Samuel Dastrup and Ingrid Gould Ellen
Forewarned: The Use of Neighborhood Early Warning Systems for Gentrification and Displacement
Karen Chapple and Miriam Zuk
Preserving and Expanding Affordability in Neighborhoods Experiencing Rising Rents and Property Values
Jeffrey Lubell
Commentary: A Federal Perspective on Gentrification
Katherine M. O’Regan
Commentary: 21st Century Gentrification
Lance M. Freeman
Commentary: Causes and Consequences of Gentrification and the Future of Equitable Development Policy
Derek Hyra
Point of Contention: Driverless Cars
Cautious Optimism About Driverless Cars and Land Use in American Metropolitan Areas
Brandon Fuller
Choice and Speculation
Lisa Schweitzer
Transitioning to Driverless Cars
Gilles Duranton
Driverless Cars and the City: Sharing Cars, Not Rides
Wendell Cox
Refereed Papers
Vouchers and Neighborhood Distress: The Unrealized Potential for Families With Housing Choice Vouchers To Reside in Neighborhoods With Low Levels of Distress
Alex Schwartz, Kirk McClure, and Lydia B. Taghavi
Affordable Rental Housing Development in the For-Profit Sector: A Review of the Literature
Rachel G. Bratt and Irene Lew
Departments
Data Shop: Chicago Multifamily Market Characterization: Developing a Comprehensive Picture of the Multifamily Housing Landscape
Rachel Scheu and Margaret Garascia
Industrial Revolution: Clean Heat: A Technical Response to a Policy Innovation
Diana Hernández
Foreign Exchange: A Rocky Path to Homeownership: Why Germany Eliminated Large-Scale Subsidies for Homeowners
Alexander Reisenbichler
Housing Policies in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and the United States: Lessons Learned
Christian A.L. Hilber and Oliver Schöni
Evaluation Tradecraft:
Sensitivity of Treatment on Treated Effects in the Housing Vouchers Welfare Experiment to Alternative Measures of Compliance
Daniel Gubits and Mark Shroder
Affordable Design: 2016 Innovation in Affordable Housing Student Design and Planning Competition: Monteria Village, Santa Barbara, California
compiled by Regina Gray
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 (HUD). Subscriptions are available at no charge and single copies at a nominal fee. The journal is also available on line at https://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 report and others sponsored by PD&R. Other services of HUD USER, PD&R’s Research and Information Service, include listservs, special interest and bimonthly publications (best practices, significant studies from other sources), access to public use databases, and a hotline (1–800–245–2691) for help with accessing the information you need. |