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The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program Goes Mainstream and Moves to the Suburbs
Comment: Freeman
Comment: Varady
Comment: Rengert
Emerging Cohort Trends in Housing Debt and Home Equity
Philadelphia's Neighborhood Transformation Initiative: A Case Study of Mayoral Leadership, Bold Planning, and Conflict
Property Taxes and Residents' Housing Choices: A Case Study of Middlesex County, New Jersey
Assessing Residents' Opinions on Changes in a Gentrifying Neighbood: A Case Study of the Alberta Neighborhod in Portland, Oregon
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Assessing Residents' Opinions on Changes in a Gentrifying Neighbood: A Case Study of the Alberta Neighborhod in Portland, Oregon
Volume 17, Issue 3
2006
 
Daniel Monroe Sullivan
 
In this article, I use survey data to examine residents’ opinions about
changes in the gentrifying Alberta neighborhood of Portland, OR. This neighborhood
is diverse in terms of race, socioeconomic status, tenure status, and
length of residence, and there has been an influx of educated white residents,
some of whom have been instrumental in creating the new “Alberta Arts”
identity, coupled with a decline in black residents, businesses, and cultural institutions.  I evaluate which of the residents are most likely to approve of these
changes.

The majority of the residents like the way the neighborhood is evolving.
However, homeowners and longtime white residents are more likely to approve
of the changes. Further analysis reveals that homeowners and white residents
have more relations with—and are more trusting of—their neighbors and shop
more at the neighborhood’s new grocery store. Homeowners are also less likely
to feel vulnerable to being displaced.
 
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