Volume 19, Issue 4
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Volume 16, Issues 3 and 4
Does Mobility Matter: The Neighborhood Conditions of Housing Voucher Holders by Race and Ethnicity
Comment: Khadduri
Comment: Bratt
Comment: McClure
Participation in a Residential Mobility Program from the Clients' Perspective: Findings from Gautreaux Two
Residential Location, Transportation, and Welfare-to-Work in the United States: A Case Study of Milwaukee
The Impacts of Welfare Reform on Recipients of Housing Assistance
The Cost-Effectiveness of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Relative to Vouchers: Evidence from Six Metropolitan Areas
What Makes Community Reinvestment Act Agreements Work? A Study of Lender Responses
The Legacy of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation
Housing Vouchers in the United States, Great Britain, and the Netherlands: Current Issues and Future Perspectives
Volume 16, Issue 2
Volume 16, Issue 1
Volume 15, Issue 4
Volume 15, Issue 3
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The Legacy of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation
Volume 16, Issues 3 & 4
2005
Kristen B. Crossney and David W. Bartelt
 
The appraisal practices of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) and its Residential Security Maps are often cited as major contributors to later redlining and the perpetuation of segregation through unequal access to mortgage credit. This article focuses on whether there was a relationship between the HOLC’s neighborhood assessments and mortgage outcomes.
 
Our results indicate that the agency was clearly instrumental in restructuring the home finance system and permitting far greater access to homeownership, but it is important to consider other factors in examining the HOLC’s legacy in the reshaping of the mortgage market and the operation of the financial sector after the Great Depression. Specifically, the issue of increasing segregation in older cities in the late 20th century remains inextricably linked to both the shifting nature of real estate finance after the HOLC era and the demographic, economic, and residential changes affecting U.S. cities.
 
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