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Title: GGR 357 H1F Geography of Housing and Housing Policy


1
GGR 357 H1F Geography of Housing and Housing
Policy 
Session 5 May 28, 2008Segregation on the
housing market
DR. AMANDA HELDERMAN
2
Announcements
  • http//individual.utoronto.ca/helderman
  • Midterm
  • You are not expected to reproduce author names
    and dates of publication
  • No detailed numbers are expected to be reproduced
  • You are expected to know general numbers such as
    the percentage of homeownership in Canada
  • You are expected to understand the general
    functioning of the housing market, for as far as
    mechanisms have been reviewed during the first
    six sessions

3
Announcements (midterm)
  • You are expected to be able to compare and
    reflect on additional readings
  • Slides are important indications for relevance of
    topics and additional information
  • Particularly relevant chapters of Hulchanski
    Shapcott listed in syllabus with additional
    readings
  • 3 general short answer questions, 2 essayistic
    questions (pick 2 out of 3)

4
Learned from exclusion
5
Learned from exclusion
  • Economic, political and social exclusion
  • Depends largely on income and the degree of
    forced dependence on state benefits and services
  • Social exclusion denial of social rights or
    non-realization of social rights
  • Almost entirely an urban problem
  • Applicability (different in time and space) of a
    paradigm of the welfare state matters for social
    exclusion context!

6
Learned from social exclusion and housing
  • Housing is the main item on the household budget
  • Fixes social location
  • Housing is an arena of social exclusion and
    housing plays a role in social exclusion from
    other arenas
  • 1. Failure to secure adequate accommodation
    (e.g. by discrimination)
  • 2. Housing consumption may impair access to
    wider citizenship rights

7
Learned from social exclusion and housing
  • Links between social exclusion and housing
  • Tenure (wealth)
  • Housing conditions (health, especially in
    childhood)
  • Spatial mismatch of low-cost housing and job
    opportunities (Spatial mismatch hypothesis Kain,
    1968 confirmed by Smith Zenou, 2003)
  • Process of spatial concentration of disadvantage
    -gt Spatial segregation/ Residential segregation

8
Introduction
  • Residential segregation has received a lot of
    attention in both academic and popular media
  • Massey Denton, 1993
  • American Apartheid ? Residential segregation as
    the principal organizational feature of American
    society, creating an urban underclass or
    Hypersegregated areas (Frey, 1993)

9
Introduction
  • Residential segregation
  • What is it?
  • Why is it good or bad for housing circumstances
    of Canadians?
  • Many mechanisms/causes and theories!
  • Many different circumstances of different groups
    of people
  • Policy practices

10
Residential segregation
  • Spatial effect of social exclusion
  • Spatially disadvantaged communities concentrate
    exclusion, with mutually-reinforcing multiple
    deprivations - poor housing, poor education, poor
    employment opportunities and poor services -
    characteristic of many inner urban areas and
    peripheral estates
  • Economic and racial divides are translated in
    spatial divides
  • Segregation implies segmentation due to
    discrimination, but this is not always the case

11
Different backgrounds of segregation
  • Unintended segregation discrimination
  • Much literature about ethnic groups, suggesting
    that often other mechanisms than socioeconomic
    distinction are dominant
  • Intended segregation immigrant support networks
    and community groups
  • Intended segregation Gated communities
  • Social class hypothesis
  • Socio-demographic characteristics (education,
    income, language, status) explain 95 segregation
    for Hispanics, 50 Asian, 30 white or black
    households (Bayer et al., 2004)

12
Concentration of population groups
  • Immigration
  • Ethnic groups or Minorities (socially
    constructed, potentially problematic) often
    assumed correlated with poverty (some
    correlation, but should not be interchangeably
    used!)
  • Toronto and Vancouver both accommodated
    approximately 38 visible minorities in 2001.
    Toronto 47 in 2006.
  • Concentration of ethnic groups has several causes
    and mechanisms

13
Concentration of population groups
  • Even though concentration is traditionally viewed
    as a disadvantaging situation, there also are
    advantages
  • Three main theories that explain different
    mechanisms behind concentration of population
    groups
  • Assimilation Perspective
  • Place Stratification Perspective
  • Ethnic Enclave/Resources Perspective

14
Spatial Assimilation Model
  • Assumption newcomers start at the bottom of the
    socio-economic ladder
  • Main principle ethnic minorities will leave
    their ethnic communities as soon as
    socio-economic status improves and cultural
    assimilation progresses
  • Derived from human ecology theory (Taeuber
    Taeuber, 1965) migration history, housing stock,
    and employment (metropolitan context) influence
    racial and socio-economic configuration of
    population and neighbourhoods

15
Spatial Assimilation Model
  • Critical approach towards spatial assimilation
    model
  • Dominant in North-American literature (Park,
    1925 Gordon, 1964) but not unchallenged
  • Possible changing relationship between
    residential segregation and social integration
  • Occasionally found inappropriate for Canadian
    situation (Balakrishnan et al., 2005), especially
    for the cases of the Chinese and South-Asian
    population who are highly segregated but who have
    a long settlement history and incomes close to
    the national average

16
The case of Toronto, 2001 (Balakrishnan et al.,
2005)
  • Segregation index UD Income
  • Chinese 0.531 28.8 0.81
  • South Asians 0.449 27.1 0.74
  • Filipinos 0.404 32.2 0.66
  • Blacks 0.397 9.2 0.66
  • All Toronto - 22.9 1.00
  • Canada - 15.4 0.92

17
Spatial Assimilation Model
  • Low socio-economic status is compensated by the
    advantages of living in an ethnic community
  • General process of socio-economic and cultural
    assimilation changes neighbourhood preferences
  • Acculturation provides the desire, and social
    mobility the means, for immigrants to achieve
    spatial assimilation
  • People act upon their highest achievable economic
    status
  • Tested effects of suburbanization

18
Spatial Assimilation Model
  • Measures of cultural assimilation (different
    between population groups)
  • Language proficiency and language barriers
  • Occupational skills
  • Length of residence
  • Social networks
  • First of second generation?
  • Citizenship

19
Spatial Assimilation Model
  • Spatial integration moving outside ethnic
    concentration areas
  • Measures of cultural assimilation Residential
    mobility
  • Moving into non-concentration neighbourhood
    outflow
  • Moving into another concentration neighbourhood
    filtering

20
Place Stratification Perspective
  • Main principle acculturation unlikely leads to
    leaving concentration areas as long as
    discrimination persists
  • Xenophobia of indigenous households
  • Discrimination hampers ethnic groups residential
    mobility
  • Discrimination by mortgage lenders, real-estate
    agents, landlords, resident organizations, local
    and national authorities

21
Place Stratification Perspective
  • Having to rely on social support networks limits
    housing choice
  • No widening of the gap in homeownership between
    black and white communities, but the gap in home
    values has widened (Collins Margo, 2001)
  • Black communities in USA

22
Ethnic Enclave Model
  • Main principle bonding with own community will
    not necessarily weaken in the course of time
  • Minorities may not want to assimilate into the
    dominant (white) culture
  • A higher income does not lead to changes in
    neighbourhood preferences
  • People with a higher status may specifically want
    to show this to their own community
  • Cultural distance between ethnic group and host
    society

23
Ethnic Enclave Model
  • Advantages of ethnic ancestry in proximity
  • Maximize social interaction
  • Maintain group norms and values
  • Threshold population present for
  • Ethnic clubs
  • Churches
  • Language newspapers
  • Specialty stores
  • Opportunities for ethnic entrepreneurship

24
Ethnic Enclave Model
  • Ties within ethnic group are kept alive by a
    constant influx of new immigrants
  • Transnational communities part of the community
    lives in the country of origin
  • The alternative route that the ethnic enclave
    model poses is upward mobility on the labour
    market (instead of housing market)
  • Retention of identity and culture may hamper
    labour market participation of wider community

25
Ethnic Enclave Model
  • Two critical notes on spatial assimilation model
    from Ethnic Enclave perspective
  • people may not want to assimilate (1), and
  • assimilation and socio-economic mobility are not
    necessarily connected (2)

26
Ethnic Enclave Model
  • Motives for staying in concentration area making
    use of own networks, solidarity, and retaining
    own culture
  • Greater numbers of ethnic group ? increased
    interaction within community and decreased
    interaction outside community often found
  • Ethnic Enclave Model does not rule out
    suburbanization

27
Homogeneity as a natural goal?
  • People naturally seem to strive for homogenous
    residential areas
  • Xenophobia
  • Two worlds apart
  • Undesirable if societal integration is hampered ?
    estrangement
  • Social homogeneity is also a way of establishing
    well-functioning living environments
  • Homogeneity facilitates parallel interests of
    residents and social cohesion
  • Heterogeneity may increase social tensions

28
Concentrated and condemned?
  • Not only question of how and why concentration
    occurs, but also why it most often is viewed as a
    negative phenomenon
  • Concentration reduces participation opportunities
    and restricts participation in economic, social,
    and cultural spheres of society
  • Concentration may reinforce social and ethnic
    distinctions and poor housing quality and
    neighbourhood reputation
  • Concentration may fuel social inequality and lack
    of understanding between groups settled in
    different areas

29
Concentrated and condemned?
  • Two theories explaining negative influences from
    concentration
  • Stigmatization theory
  • Socialization theory

30
Stigmatization theory
  • Most literature explaining negative effects of
    concentration of population groups builds on this
    theory
  • Negative image of area leads to discrimination of
    people from this area (e.g. employers)
  • Stigmatization reduces the chances of residents
    in concentration areas

31
Socialization theory
  • Identifying with individuals in the area may lead
    the characteristics of others becoming the norm
  • Culture of poverty/ Poverty-cycle
  • Limited presence of positive role models in
    concentration areas ? child development
  • Social stability and cohesion
  • Opportunities for informal assistance,
    solidarity, and ethnic entrepreneurship
  • Social dynamics reduce social differences
  • Social dynamics are fueled by economic processes,
    and social-democratic, institutional, historical,
    and cultural factors

32
The other side of concentration
  • Indigenous people choose to segregate themselves
    in the most attractive areas in the inner city
    and in suburbs, if they can
  • Indigenous people have the advantage that they
    may have an alternative outside the city
  • Indigenous population can read local newspapers
    and often has a better local network for word of
    mouth
  • Immigrants have less choice. On average larger
    families, lower incomes. Need large cheap
    apartments (scarce). Wait for social housing or
    quick alternative less desired by indigenous
    people

33
The other side of concentration
  • Rich, western immigrants are successful in
    economically integrating themselves but are
    generally not very socially or spatially
    integrated
  • High status ethnic groups are not seen as a
    problem, or even as ethnic groups!
  • Increasingly important migrant groups in a
    globalizing economy new migrant population

34
Gated communities
  • Gated communities Exclusivity or social
    segregation?
  • Self-imposed exclusion
  • Fortified enclaves with legal agreements
  • Housing development that restricts public access
    through the use of gates, walls, fences
  • Security staff and variety of services such as
    garbage collection, shops, road maintenance, and
    leisure activities
  • Common fees for common services, buildings
  • Common code of conduct

35
Gated communities
  • Aimed at retired, wealthy people or those with
    portable work
  • Gated communities are a response to the fear of
    crime (Atkinson et al., 2004)
  • Aimed at people who have fear after 9/11 safety
    no longer in numbers in the large cities
  • Privatization of public space
  • Fortification of urban and residential space
  • People seeking like-minded people, communitarian
    ideology

36
Gated communities
  • Hinders political empathy
  • Helps concentrate disadvantage of exclusion from
    employment and educational opportunity, and thus
    personal development
  • Residents desire for anonymity and reluctance to
    participate in unnecessary social contact?
    governance left up to real estate companies

37
Gated community in Arizona
38
Contextual factors for segregation
  • Welfare state paradigm
  • Rights to housing legal immigrants same as
    indigenous people
  • Historical tie of host nation with immigrant
    group
  • Difference between community culture and culture
    of host society
  • Availability (social) housing in certain
    location/ neighbourhood
  • Out-migration level, elderly population moving to
    elderly housing, large (lower quality)
    developments

39
Role welfare states
Welfare states
Universal
Residual
Less segregation
More segregation
40
Role social housing
Promotes extreme marginalization
Prevents extreme marginalization
Social housing
41
Role welfare states
  • Incentives
  • Stepping in when market fails
  • Combination supposed to offer best protection
    against ethnic stratification and the formation
    of underclass society
  • But there are other nodes of integration than the
    state market exchange and reciprocity
  • Shift to more liberal welfare, however, does pose
    threat of increasing social inequality but is not
    necessarily paired with stratification or
    condemnation

42
European welfare states
  • Shift to more liberal welfare
  • More market influence
  • Retrenching government funding (also in social
    housing)
  • Shrinking social housing stock
  • Increasing income inequalities
  • Decreasing social benefits
  • More choice for affluent people
  • Less choice for the less affluent people
  • Causes for spatial concentration of people with
    less economic opportunities

43
European welfare states
  • Social and income differences in North-West
    Europe half the size of those in North-America,
    so far (differences are increasing)
  • Degree to which such differences are spatially
    translated also much lower
  • Less socio-spatial differences in urban
    environments

44
Role state, other
  • Multiculturalism policy is based on the idea that
    the best way of integrating immigrants in
    Canadas social system is to preserve and enhance
    multicultural heritage while working to achieve
    equality (Kymlica, 1998)

45
Measuring concentration
  • Segregation indices compare the distribution of
    one group to the distribution of all other groups
  • Gini index measures concentration of a group
  • Index of dissimilarity measures the differential
    distribution of two groups
  • See Balakrishnan Gyima, 2003!
  • Paint a rough picture of residential separation
    of population groups

46
Measuring concentration
  • Not useful at detailed spatial level assessed by
    people as their residential structure
  • Hide dynamics as a result of residential mobility
  • Older immigrants move out while new immigrants
    move into same neighbourhood, keeps concentration
    high

47
Measuring concentration with GIS
  • Measuring the degree of poor people within 300 m
    of residential location of each individual
    (Musterd Deurloo, 2004 Johnson, 1984)
  • Measuring share of poor people in an area, grid
    with 300 m buffer around each square (Isaaks
    Mohan, 1989)
  • Advantages related to individuals and small
    residential structures that people can identify
    with
  • Issues few people within each area ? validity?

48
Measuring segregation
  • Five dimensions of residential segregation
    (Massey Denton, 1988)
  • Unevenness (quality housing, neighbourhood and
    socio-economic characteristics)
  • Isolation (indices of contact world outside
    area)
  • Concentration (indices of density socio-economic
    indicators)
  • Clustering (scattered minority neighbourhoods)
  • Centralization (central cities)

49
Measuring economic integration
  • Income of immigrants relative to Canadian born
  • Often, not always, found to be related to
    duration of stay in Canada (see Spatial
    Assimilation Theory)
  • Trend deterioration on entry level earnings
  • Trend greater acceptance of ethnic diversity and
    intermarriage so segregation may be expected to
    decrease

50
Types of neighbourhoods
  • Alternative measurement of residential
    segregation, preferably measured at several
    moments in time and in part related to rest of
    the city
  • Ghetto
  • Ethnic neighbourhood (minority/majority)
  • Area of over-representation
  • Majority-minority area

51
Ghetto
  • In the original meaning of the word almost
    exclusively preserve of one ethnic group
  • At least 80 of the population is from the same
    ethnic group
  • Separate area for ethnic groups because majority
    population does not want to live in the same
    area, even if they are economically equal
  • Modern usage of ghetto often refers to
    disadvantaged members in society and a harsh
    living environment
  • Few or no ghettos in welfare states that foster
    integration

52
Ethnic neighbourhood
  • There may be several ethnic groups residing in
    the neighbourhood, but one group is the largest
  • Majority ethnic neighbourhood 50-80 same ethnic
    group
  • Minority ethnic neighbourhood less than 50 same
    ethnic group

53
Area of over-representation
  • The main ethnic group is not dominant, but is
    over-represented
  • More than two standard deviations of the share of
    the population of the city as a whole resides in
    the neighbourhood

54
Majority-minority area
  • No single ethnic group is over 50 of the
    population
  • All minority groups together make up 50 of the
    population at least
  • Majority-minority area overlaps with area of
    over-representation

55
Consequences of segregation
  • Ongoing out-migration of indigenous people from
    older and newer concentration areas
  • White flight
  • Danger that segregated groups will mobilize
    against excluded groups viewed as outsiders
    religious or racial minorities, travellers, or
    indeed homeless young people and single parents
    from outside the area, unconnected with its
    established families

56
Consequences of segregation
  • Health inequality
  • Poverty, over-crowdedness, housing quality,
    social disintegration, limited access to health
    care
  • Fairly recent interest in research (since 2000)
  • TB/ HIV and AIDS/ STDs/Measles
  • Individual history having had measles, having
    been infected with HIV etc ? susceptibility
  • Direct probability of coming into contact with
    disease
  • Indirect bad quality living environment
    (over-crowding, ventilation)

57
Policy instruments
  • Tenant based rental assistance
  • Increases resident safety (crime) according to
    some studies

58
Policy instruments
  • Planners and urban managers aim to prevent
    segregation by
  • Adjustment of the composition of the housing
    stock
  • Size of the social housing sector
  • Allocation mechanisms stricter allocation of
    limited suitable affordable rented housing stock
    necessary
  • Lower rents should be made available to the
    weakest socio-economic groups
  • Danger marginalization of social rented segment

59
Policy instruments
  • Developing housing to achieve socio-economic mix
    in neighbourhood
  • Create a better mix of housing tenures by
    encouraging sustainable homeownership and
    creating new affordable housing
  • Limited or no success achieved in avoiding
    spatial segregation of income groups by adjusting
    housing stock (e.g. Cowan, 2006)
  • Value of property is partly determined by
    situation/ immediate environment of home
  • More expensive home in less valued neighbourhood
    will not be as attractive as the same home in
    another environment

60
Policy instruments
  • Upgrading of residential area does not lead to
    socially mixed residential environment. Instead
    higher quality homogeneous environment
  • Social housing in desired locations lead to low
    dynamics people continue living in cheap housing
    while being able to afford higher quality housing
  • Continued support for housing ? good results for
    social mobility

61
Policy instruments
  • Distribution of socio-economic and ethnic groups
    contradicts many constitutions and does not help
    population groups in many ways access to jobs,
    housing, social contacts, services, and amenities
  • Two categories of instruments to prevent
    segregation of poor people
  • Preventing poverty and encouraging social
    mobility (education and access to job market,
    increases housing options)
  • Preventing large income differences

62
Policy instruments
  • Limited income differences implies that people
    depend on more similar services and limited
    housing budgets, and more similar housing stock
  • More accessible labour market implies a more
    polarized labour market
  • Preventing large income differences thus most
    straightforward policy goal?
  • According to several sources this is the most
    important reason why income differences are
    smaller in North West Europe than in North America

63
Policy instruments
  • Dilemma Improving access to labour market may
    increase individual opportunities to improve
    ones situation and prevent segregation but
    income differences will increase ? more
    segregation
  • Is there a middle road?

64
Literature (session 5)
  • Balakrishnan, T.R. S. Gyimah (2003), Spatial
    Residential Patterns of Selected Ethnic Groups
    Significance and Policy Implications. Canadian
    Ethnic Studies, Vol. XXXV, No. 1, pp. 113-134.
  • Bauder, H. C. Sharpe (2002), Visible minorities
    in Canadas gateway cities. The Canadian
    Geographer 46/3, pp. 204-222.
  • Bourne, L.S. (1981), Market failures and housing
    problems. In The geography of housing. Chapter
    8. p. 169-189.
  • Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (2006),
    The Housing Situation and Needs of Recent
    Immigrants in the Toronto CMA. CMHC

65
Balakrishnan Gyimah (2003)
  • This paper is focusing on spatial residential
    patterns of immigrant groups in major Canadian
    cities. The societal relevance is the assumption
    that when certain groups are segregated, they are
    most likely not fully integrated in society and
    will not be participating fully in housing and
    labour markets.
  • Various measures of concentration and segregation
    are examined. The bottom line is that different
    ethnic groups have different degrees of
    segregation which are very persistent across
    generations.
  • Three hypothesis are tested the social class
    hypothesis, the social distance hypothesis
    (discrimination), and the ethnic identity
    hypothesis (involuntary housing choice through
    social class and social status) adaptation on
    the theories discussed earlier today for the
    Canadian context, but still similar.
  • Past studies have shown that the relationship
    between social distance and segregation holds
    even when social class is controlled for. Note
    discrimination has not been measured effectively.
    A proxy is used, and the authors also do not have
    sufficient socio-economic indicators.

66
Balakrishnan Gyimah (2003)
  • Ethnic segregation is not strictly along social
    class lines.
  • Measures of concentration Gini index, index of
    dissimilarity, index of segregation
  • Comparisons between gateway cities Montreal,
    Toronto and Vancouver similar patterns, but
    different degrees of segregation
  • New immigrants choose to live near their
    previously established immigrant friends and
    relatives, a process referred to as "chain"
    immigration.

67
Bauder Sharpe, 2002
  • Paper analyzes residential patterns of visible
    minority populations in three cities
  • Uncover differences in residential patterns
  • Identify immigration as reason for fragmentation
    and ethical separation
  • Hypotheses segregation explained by the
    ecological model (assimilation), by the reaction
    to discrimination (either as a defence mechanism
    and as a result of discrimination on the housing
    market), by socio-economic status, and finally by
    limited interest to move out of their own
    community
  • Conclusion The housing stock of neighbourhoods
    and the different responsiveness of visible
    minority groups to housing market characteristics
    are important. Circumstances of immigration,
    settlement policies, and geographical and
    historical context of the city are all relevant.

68
Bauder Sharpe, 2002
  • Alternative approach Bourne social mosaic
    hypothesis (social differentiation, increasing
    number of subgroups, resulting in a less rigid
    spatial pattern)
  • Economic and residential decentralization.
    Immigrants skipping downtown immigrant reception
    area has moved outward dispersed city
    hypothesis
  • Both new hypothesis are powerful but have limited
    explanatory power
  • Good/ bad segregation (voluntary, enforced)
  • Differences in the housing markets
  • Literature exposes the following factors housing
    distribution, history of metropolitan
    development, support networks, discourse on race
    and ethnicity
  • Isolation index, Dissimilarity index, Location
    quotients
  • Control for housing market characteristics.

69
Bourne, 1981
  • Expectations regarding living standards
  • Geographical dispersion of housing types
  • Equal blame on market imperfections, policy
    inefficiencies, and inefficient outcomes of
    laissez-faire model in which housing generally is
    produced for profit
  • Crowding
  • Voluntary/ involuntary segregation
  • Link between segregation and access to housing
  • Racial discrimination and housing premiums (
    motives)
  • Maintenance disincentives in housing
    improvements ? prisoners dilemma
  • Abandonment

70
CMHC report
  • Background of 3 Canadian cities and their
    neighbourhoods and housing stock
  • Immigrant household compositions
  • Socio-economic status of immigrant households
  • Crowding
  • Immigrants housing situations progress over time,
    life course
  • Structural differences in the housing situations
    of European-origin and visible minority immigrants

71
Next week Midterm
  • Monday
  • June 2, 2008
  • 5-7 pm
  • Room 158
  • Lash Miller

Good luck!
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