44 Evans, Gary W., Stephen J. Lepore, B. R. Shejwal, and M. N. Palsane. 1998. Chronic Residential Crowding and Children’s Well-Being: An Ecological Perspective. Child Development 69(6): 1514–1523. 45 Lepore, Stephen J., Gary W. Evans, and M. N. Palsane. 1991. Social Hassles and Psychological Health in the Context of Chronic Crowding. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 32(4): 357–367. 46 Guzman, Carolina, Rajiv Bhatia, and Chris Durazo. 2005. Anticipated Effects of Residential Displacement on Health: Results from Qualitative Research. Research Summary. Prepared by the San Francisco Department of Public Health and South of Market Community Action Network. 47 Bartlett, Sheridan. 1997. The Significance of Relocation for Chronically Poor Families in the USA. Environment and Urbanization 9(1): 121–132. 48 Desmond, Matthew, 2012. Eviction and the Reproduction of Urban Poverty. American Journal of Sociology 118 Number 1 (July 2012), 88–133. 49 Leventhal T, Brooks-Gunn J. The neighborhoods they live in: effects of neighborhood resi- dence upon child and adolescent outcomes. Psychology Bulletin 2000; 126:309–337. 50 Scanlon and Devine, Kevin (2001) “Residential Mobility and Youth Well-Being: Research, Policy, and Practice Issues,” The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare: Vol. 28: Iss. 1, Article 9. 51 Grigg, Jeffrey, 2012. School Enrollment Changes and Student Achievement Growth: A Case Study in Educational Disruption and Continuity. Sociology of Education Vol. 85, Number 4. pp. 388–404. 52 Keren Mertens Horn, Ingrid Gould Ellen, Amy Ellen Schwartz, 2014. Do Housing Choice Voucher Holders Live Near Good Schools? Journal of Housing Economics, Volume 24, June 2014, Pages 109–121. 53 Ibid. 54 Podmolik, Mary Ellen. “Research Links Affordable Housing to Children’s Test Scores.” Chicagotribune.com. N.p., 07 Apr. 2015. Web. 07 May 2017. 55 Ibid. 56 See The Affordable Housing Reader, page 39. 57 Ibid. 58 Leonhardt, David. “In Climbing Income Ladder, Location Matters.” The New York Times , 21 July 2013. Web. 07 May 2017. 59 D enton, N.A., Massey, D.S., 1988. Residential segregation of Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians by socioeconomic status and generation. Social Science Quarterly 69 (December), 797–817. 60 Wilson, William Julius. 1987. The Truly Disadvantaged: The Inner City, the Underclass, and Public Policy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 61 Ihlanfeldt, K. R., Scafidi, Benjamin, 2002. Black self-segregation as a cause of housing segrega- tion: evidence from the Multi-City Study of Urban Inequality. Journal of Urban Economics 51, 366–390. 62 Massey, D. S., and Fischer, M. J. 1999. “Does rising income bring integration?: New results for Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians in 1990,” Social Science Research 28, 316–326. 63 Ibid. 64 Yinger, J., 1986. Measuring racial discrimination with fair housing audits: caught in the act. The American Economic Review 76 (5), 881–893. 65 Galster, G. C., 1987. “Residential segregation and interracial economic disparities: A simultaneous equations approach,” Journal of Urban Economics 21, 22–44. 66 See de Souza Briggs, The Geography of Opportunity, Chapter 9. 67 Roisman, Florence Wagman. 2005. Keeping the Promise: Ending Racial Discrimination and Segregation in Federally Financed Housing, 48 Harvard Law Journal 913, 913–916.
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