Volume 19, Issue 4
Volume 19, Issue 3
Volume 19, Issue 2
Volume 19, Issue 1
Volume 18, Issue 4
Volume 18, Issue 3
Volume 18, Issue 2
Volume 18, Issue 1
Volume 17, Issue 4
Volume 17, Issue 3
Volume 17, Issue 2
Is Mixed-Income Development an Antidote to Urban Poverty?
Comment: Berube
Comment: Costigan
Comment: Vale
To Move or Not to Move: Relationships to Place and Relocation Choices in HOPE VI
Sustaining Homeownership: The Promise of Postpurchase Service
Foreclosure Filings and Sheriff's Sales Experienced by Low-Income, First-Time Home Buyers
Where Will I Sleep Tomorrow? Housing, Homelessness, and the Returning Prisoner
Volume 17, Issue 1
Volume 16, Issues 3 and 4
Volume 16, Issue 2
Volume 16, Issue 1
Volume 15, Issue 4
Volume 15, Issue 3
Volume 15, Issue 2
Volume 15, Issue 1
Volume 14, Issue 4
Volume 14, Issue 3
Volume 14, Issues 1 and 2
Volume 13, Issue 4
Volume 13, Issue 3
Volume 13, Issue 2
Volume 13, Issue 1
Volume 12, Issue 4
Volume 12, Issue 3
Volume 12, Issue 2
Volume 12, Issue 1
Volume 11, Issue 4
Volume 11, Issue 3
Volume 11, Issue 2
Volume 11, Issue 1
Volume 10, Issue 4
Volume 10, Issue 3
Volume 10, Issue 2
Volume 10, Issue 1
Volume 9, Issue 4
Volume 9, Issue 3
Volume 9, Issue 2
Volume 9, Issue 1
Volume 8, Issue 4
Volume 8, Issue 3
Volume 8, Issue 2
Volume 8, Issue 1
Volume 7, Issue 4
Volume 7, Issue 3
Volume 7, Issue 2
Volume 7, Issue 1
Volume 6, Issue 4
Volume 6, Issue 3
Volume 6, Issue 2
Volume 6, Issue 1
Volume 5, Issue 4
Volume 5, Issue 3
Volume 5, Issue 2
Volume 5, Issue 1
Volume 4, Issue 4
Volume 4, Issue 3
Volume 4, issue 2
Volume 4, Issue 1
Volume 3, Issue 4
Volume 3, Issue 3
Volume 3, Issue 2
Volume 3, Issue 1
Volume 2, Issue 4
Volume 2, Issue 3
Volume 2, Issue 2
Volume 2 Issue 1
Volume 1, Issue 1

Search:
All of MI
Housing Policy Debate

Metropolitan Institute
1021 Prince St, Suite 100
Alexandria, VA 22314
703-706-8100 tel
703-518-8009 fax
mivt@vt.edu


mi email
 
Sign up today and recieve email notification of new postings to the MI site.
First Name: *
Last Name:*
Company or  Affiliation:*
Email:*


* Required Field


Comment: Berube
Volume 17, Issue 2
2006
 
Alan Berube
If, as Joseph argues, there is so little evidence that mixed-income development alleviates poverty, why does it enjoy such wide acceptance as a method of delivering affordable housing? I argue that such development, while still small in scale, is largely faithful to the economic integration that occurs organically in most urban neighborhoods today. Moreover, the greater degree of social control and higher quality of public and private services in mixed-income versus high-poverty neighborhoods provide benefits for residents and local governments alike. For these and other reasons, many European nations have embraced mixed-income strategies even more actively than the United States has.
Although additional research is surely needed, Joseph’s findings on mixed-income urban developments should be viewed in the wider context of what we know about “dispersal” and “inclusionary” housing strategies that embrace
economic integration as a viable antidote to concentrated urban poverty.
 
© Copyright 2009 Metropolitan Institute. All Rights Reserved. Designed by DC Web Designers