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Residential mobility and opportunities: Early impacts of the moving to opportunity demonstration program in Chicago
100
Citations
19
References
2001
Year
Residential MobilityLabor Force ParticipationSocial SciencesPovertyEarly ImpactsExperimental DesignPublic HealthMobility AnalysisHuman MobilityHousingPublic PolicyFamily HousingUrban PlanningOpportunity Demonstration ProgramPopulation HouseholdPublic HousingDisadvantaged BackgroundResidential DevelopmentCommunity DevelopmentSociologyUrban EconomicsAffordable HousingHousing PolicyCommunity HousingUrban MobilityDemographyGentrificationHousing Advocacy
Abstract This article uses survey data from the Moving to Opportunity demonstration program in Chicago to explore changes for households moving from public housing. The focus is on two key areas: housing and neighborhood conditions, and labor force participation and employment of householders. The experimental design of the program allows the differences between comparison households, which moved with a regular Section 8 voucher, and experimental households, which moved to low‐poverty neighborhoods with housing counseling assistance, to be examined. The findings, based on interviews an average of 18 months after families moved, reveal dramatic improvements in neighborhood and housing conditions for all participating families; experimental families experienced even greater gains in terms of housing and especially neighborhood conditions. Labor force participation and employment increased for householders in both groups, likely fueled by the robust economy throughout much of the country and supporting similar findings for program participants in New York and Boston. Keywords: HousingMobilityNeighborhoods
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