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Landlord behavior and crime

2024-09-12 18:15:53.641012+02 by Dan Lyke 0 comments

Neighborhoods of last resort: How landlord strategies concentrate violent crime Henry Gomory, Matthew Desmond

Drawing on data pertaining to eviction rates, criminal incidents, housing code violations, and landlord behavior in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, this study documents how extractive rental management strategies, such as weak tenant screening, frequent eviction filings, and property disinvestment, concentrate crime at particular properties. In turn, high rates of crime in a neighborhood incentivize these extractive landlord strategies. By showing how landlords’ economic strategies are central to urban crime geographies, this study contributes to our understanding of third-party policing by revealing the limits of market-based solutions to place management dilemmas.

https://doi.org/10.1111/1745-9125.12332

Comparing forms of neighborhood instability as predictors of violence in Richmond, VA Samuel J. West, Diane Bishop, Derek A. Chapman, Nicholas D. Thomson

Our results indicated that the tax delinquency of company-owned properties (e.g., rental homes, apartments) was the only variable in our model (R2 = 0.62) that was associated with violence in all but four Richmond neighborhoods. We replicated this analysis using violence data from a later point in time which yielded largely identical results. These findings indicate that external sources of neighborhood instability may be more important to predicting violence than internal sources.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273718

Via Skepchick: Who's worse: Venezuelan gangs, or landlords?

[ related topics: Politics Economics Real Estate Model Building ]

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