《Social Support and Residential Stability in Privately Owned Assisted Housing》

打印
作者
来源
CITY & COMMUNITY,Vol.18,Issue1,P.302-320
语言
英文
关键字
RACE; COMMUNITY; DENSITY; INTEGRATION; NETWORKS; MOBILITY; CRIME; POOR; FEAR
作者单位
[Beck, Kevin] Univ Calif San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA. Beck, K (reprint author), Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Sociol, 401 Social Sci Bldg,9500 Gilman Dr Dept 0533, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA. E-Mail: krbeck@ucsd.edu
摘要
Theories explaining social cohesion in assisted housing largely pivot between two positions. The first suggests that assisted renters tend to be isolated from their neighbors because they live in high-poverty neighborhoods and in housing complexes that inhibit residential interaction. The second suggests that assisted renters are not isolated but instead exchange support with their neighbors in order to mitigate material hardships. How do residents in assisted housing manage to exchange support in a context that would seem to inhibit interaction? Drawing on the American Housing Survey for data on residential mobility and the San Diego Assisted Housing Survey for data on residential interaction, I test the hypothesis that assisted housing increases residential stability, and that increased stability provides assisted renters with more opportunities to build support networks with their neighbors. I find evidence that rent subsidies slow the pace of residential mobility and those longtime residents of assisted housing are more likely to exchange support with their neighbors than residents who more recently moved in. The findings inform debates over social cohesion in assisted housing and assisted housing policy.