Publication | Closed Access
Housing Discrimination and the Toxics Exposure Gap in the United States: Evidence from the Rental Market
38
Citations
37
References
2020
Year
Urban HealthMinority AccessDiscriminationEducationHealth DisparitiesRacial DisparitiesUnited StatesRacePublic HealthRental MarketStatisticsEthnic DiscriminationHousingHousing DiscriminationPublic PolicyPopulation ExposureDisparate ImpactToxics Exposure GapResidential DevelopmentCorrespondence ExperimentSociologyUrban EconomicsAffordable Housing
Abstract Local pollution exposures have a disproportionate impact on minority households, but the root causes remain unclear. This study conducts a correspondence experiment on a major online housing platform to test whether housing discrimination constrains minority access to housing options in markets with significant sources of airborne chemical toxics. We find that renters with African American or Hispanic/Latinx names are 41% less likely than renters with white names to receive responses for properties in low-exposure locations. We find no evidence of discriminatory constraints in high-exposure locations, indicating that discrimination increases relative access to housing choices at elevated exposure risk.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1