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Housing Affordability for Households of Color in Massachusetts
Institute for Asian American Studies Publications
  • Michael E. Stone, University of Massachusetts Boston
Document Type
Research Report
Publication Date
12-1-2006
Abstract

While housing is deeply significant for all of us, in our society it tends to pose particular challenges to many, if not most, people of color. For one thing, households of color continue to have considerably lower incomes, on average, than White-headed households. This means that households of color can, on average, afford less and therefore have fewer housing choices available, just for economic reasons alone. Yet we are not in a world where differential housing choices are determined only by ability to pay. Residential segregation by race persists and is not merely a consequence of unacceptable practices of the past; housing discrimination remains disturbingly wide-spread even though formally and legally proscribed. Restricted housing opportunities for people of color have consequences for educational opportunity and thus, ultimately, for employment opportunity, hence for income and thus—in a cumulative causal cycle—for housing opportunity.

Comments

Prepared for the Mauricio Gastón Institute for Latino Public Policy and Community Development, the Institute for Asian American Studies, and the William Monroe Trotter Institute for the Study of Black Culture.

Community Engaged/Serving
No, this is not community-engaged.
Citation Information
Michael E. Stone. "Housing Affordability for Households of Color in Massachusetts" (2006)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/michael_stone/4/