UCLA Housing Voice

By: UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies
  • Summary

  • Why does the housing market seem so broken? And what can we do about it? UCLA Housing Voice tackles these questions in conversation with leading housing researchers, with each episode centered on a study and its implications for creating more affordable and accessible communities.
    © 2024 UCLA Housing Voice
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Episodes
  • Ep 76: How Housing Supply Responds to Rising Demand with Nathaniel Baum-Snow
    Aug 7 2024

    When the demand for housing rises, which kinds of neighborhoods respond by building more homes, and which just get more expensive? Nathaniel Baum-Snow joins to discuss his research on the different responses of urban, suburban, and exurban neighborhoods, and the many forms “supply” can take.

    Show notes:

    • Baum-Snow, N., & Han, L. (2024). The Microgeography of Housing Supply. Journal of Political Economy, 132(6), 1897-1946.
    • Alameldin, M., & Karlinsky, S. 2024). Construction Defect Liability in California: How Reform Could Increase Affordable Homeownership Opportunities. UC Berkeley Terner Center for Housing Innovation.
    • Saiz, A. (2010). The Geographic Determinants of Housing Supply. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125(3), 1253-1296.
    • UCLA Lewis Center research on housing demolition and redevelopment trends in Los Angeles.
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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Ep 75: Segregating the Built Environment with Ann Owens
    Jul 24 2024

    We often talk about residential segregation by race or income, but we rarely explore it in the literal sense — as in segregation of residences: of one kind of housing from another. Ann Owens joins to discuss her research on how segregation manifests itself in our built environment in cities and neighborhoods across the U.S.

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    1 hr
  • Ep 74: Racial (and Spatial) Disparities in Rental Assistance with Andrew Fenelon
    Jul 10 2024

    Black households make up a disproportionate share of rent assistance recipients. Andrew Fenelon discusses how a “two-tiered approach to housing support" favoring white homeowners helped create the disparity.

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    53 mins

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