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title: "Three Essays on Housing Affordability in Chinese Cities" | ||
collection: publications | ||
permalink: /publication/2023-07-01 | ||
excerpt: '[https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/three-essays-on-housing-affordability-chinese/docview/2871572368/se-2?accountid=15159](https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/three-essays-on-housing-affordability-chinese/docview/2871572368/se-2?accountid=15159)' | ||
date: 2023-07-01 | ||
venue: 'University of Minnesota ProQuest Dissertations & Theses' | ||
paperurl: | ||
citation: | ||
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Housing policy and state-led redevelopment programs play central roles in the production of urban inequality in Chinese cities. Despite the potentially adverse impact of state-led redevelopment on marginalized population, studies that examines the interconnectedness of redevelopment, housing affordability, and migrants’ health have been rare. Using data compiled from the Beijing Municipal Government, the real estate brokerage company Lianjia, the Census Bureau, and the National Health Commission, the three essays fill in the current research gap by understanding the geography of rental affordable housing in recent years, examining the causal relationship between state-led redevelopment and rental housing affordability, and investigating the relationship between declining housing affordability and migrant health. The results suggest that (1) rental housing in Chinese cities has become less affordable in recent years partially due to the state-led urban redevelopment; and (2) the declining housing affordability jeopardizes migrant workers’ residential stability and health. | ||
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[Download paper here](https://yiw0104.github.io/files/Three_Essays_on_Housing_Afford.pdf) | ||
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Citation Details: Wang, Y. (2023). Three Essays on Housing Affordability in Chinese Cities (Doctoral dissertation, University of Minnesota). |
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title: "Eviction in Oregon's Subsidized Affordable Housing" | ||
collection: publications | ||
permalink: /publication/2024-09-20 | ||
excerpt: '[https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cus_pubs/156/](https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cus_pubs/156/)' | ||
date: 2024-09-20 | ||
venue: 'Portland State University Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports' | ||
paperurl: | ||
citation: | ||
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Despite Oregon's expanded investments in affordable housing development and eviction prevention, over 5,400 eviction cases were filed in the state’s subsidized housing from January 2019 to December 2023. This report maps out the landscape of subsidized housing eviction in Oregon and brings attention to the high share of eviction judgments in subsidized eviction cases, the disproportionate rate of eviction filings from housing-authority-contracted management companies and nonprofit housing providers, and the great disparities in legal representation between landlords and tenants. | ||
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[Download paper here](https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1156&context=cus_pubs) | ||
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Citation Details: Wang, Y., Bates, L. K., Amir-Ghassemi, A., Cho, M., Zapata, M., Greene J., Carroll, C., & MacArthur, D. (2024). Eviction in Oregon's Subsidized Affordable Housing. Center for Urban Studies Publications and Reports, Portland State University. |
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title: "Political Context and State-Level Health Behavior Disparities" | ||
collection: publications | ||
permalink: /publication/2024-10-01 | ||
excerpt: '[https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/23780231241285061](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/23780231241285061)' | ||
date: 2024-10-01 | ||
venue: 'Socius' | ||
paperurl: | ||
citation: | ||
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Geographical residence predicts health and well-being. Population health, life expectancy, and mortality are partially the outcome of the characteristics of one’s social policy context. Yet how do such links occur? We extend focus from health outcomes to health behaviors and from a policy context to a broader political context. Using 20 waves of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System between 1993 and 2021 in combination with the Correlates of State Policy Project, we find that right-leaning political contexts—both policies and public attitudes—are predictive of riskier health behaviors. Counterfactual simulations show that these associations are due less to states becoming more different over time but rather, with political contexts increasing in their predictiveness over time. Results from this study broaden the pathways linking local politics to health and identify a key antecedent, health behaviors, that helps explain political context’s influence on health. | ||
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Citation Details: VanHeuvelen, J. S., Wang, Y., & VanHeuvelen, T. (2024). Political Context and State-Level Health Behavior Disparities. Socius, 10, 23780231241285061. |
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