Unrestricted Data and Code for Hwang, J. and B. Shrimali. 2022. "Shared and Crowded Housing in the Bay Area: Where Gentrification and the Housing Crisis Meet COVID-19"

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract

Replication material for Jackelyn Hwang & Bina Patel Shrimali (2022) Shared and Crowded Housing in the Bay Area: Where Gentrification and the Housing Crisis Meet COVID-19, Housing Policy Debate, DOI: 10.1080/10511482.2022.2099934

Paper Abstract: Amid the growing affordable housing crisis and widespread gentrification over the last decade, people have been moving less than before and increasingly live in shared and often crowded households across the U.S. Crowded housing has various negative health implications, including stress, sleep disorders, and infectious diseases. Difference-in- difference analysis of a unique, large-scale longitudinal consumer credit database of over 450,000 San Francisco Bay Area residents from 2002 to 2020 shows gentrification affects the probability of residents shifting to crowded households across the socioeconomic spectrum but in different ways than expected. Gentrification is negatively associated with low- socioeconomic status (SES) residents’ probability of entering crowded households, and this is largely explained by increased shifts to crowded households in neighborhoods outside of major cities showing early signs of gentrification. Conversely, gentrification is associated with increases in the probability that middle-SES residents enter crowded households, primarily in Silicon Valley. Lastly, crowding is positively associated with COVID-19 case rates, beyond density and socioeconomic and racial composition in neighborhoods, although the role of gentrification remains unclear. Housing policies that mitigate crowding can serve as early interventions in displacement prevention and reducing health inequities.

Description

Type of resource software, multimedia, text, Dataset
Date modified November 3, 2022; November 4, 2022; February 7, 2023; July 1, 2024
Publication date November 3, 2022; August 2022

Creators/Contributors

Author Hwang, Jackelyn
Contributor Shrimali, Bina

Subjects

Subject Gentrification
Subject Crowding
Subject Housing
Subject Health
Subject COVID-19
Subject Displacement
Genre Software/code
Genre Code
Genre Documentation
Genre Data
Genre Computer program
Genre Data sets
Genre Dataset

Bibliographic information

Related item
DOI https://doi.org/10.25740/cw226nt8831, https://doi.org/10.25740/cw226nt8831
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/cw226nt8831

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User agrees that, where applicable, content will not be used to identify or to otherwise infringe the privacy or confidentiality rights of individuals. Content distributed via the Stanford Digital Repository may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY).

Preferred citation

Preferred citation
Hwang, J. and Shrimali, B. (2022). Unrestricted Data and Code for Hwang, J. and B. Shrimali. 2022. "Shared and Crowded Housing in the Bay Area: Where Gentrification and the Housing Crisis Meet COVID-19". Stanford Digital Repository. Available at https://purl.stanford.edu/cw226nt8831. https://doi.org/10.25740/cw226nt8831.

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