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Evidence and Innovation in Housing Law and Policy

Evidence and Innovation in Housing Law and Policy
Open Access

Evidence and Innovation in Housing Law and Policy

Lee Anne Fennell, University of Chicago Law School
Benjamin J. Keys, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
August 2017
Available
Hardback
9781107164925
$159.00
USD
Hardback
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eBook
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    No area of law and policy is more central to our well-being than housing, yet research on the topic is too often produced in disciplinary or methodological silos that fail to connect to policy on the ground. This pathbreaking book, which features leading scholars from a range of academic fields, cuts across disciplines to forge new connections in the discourse. In accessible prose filled with cutting-edge ideas, these scholars address topics ranging from the recent financial crisis to discrimination and gentrification and show how housing law and policy impacts household wealth, financial markets, urban landscapes, and local communities. Together, they harness evidence and theory to capture the 'state of play' in housing, generating insights that will be relevant to academics and policymakers alike. This title is also available as Open Access.

    • Emphasizes housing's dual role as an instrument of wealth-building and as a mechanism for community building
    • Represents a wide range of methodological and disciplinary perspectives, while still remaining succinct and accessible
    • Brings together, in a single volume, the newest work of top experts in the field working on housing issues
    • This book is also available as Open Access

    Product details

    August 2017
    Hardback
    9781107164925
    356 pages
    235 × 156 × 20 mm
    0.7kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Lee Anne Fennell and Benjamin J. Keys
    • Part I. Housing and the Metropolis: Law and Policy Perspectives:
    • 1. The rise of the homevoters: how the growth machine was subverted by OPEC and Earth day William A. Fischel
    • 2. How land use law impedes transportation innovation David Schleicher
    • 3. The unassailable case against affordable housing mandates Richard A. Epstein
    • Part II. Housing as Community: Stability, Change, and Perceptions:
    • 4. Balancing the costs and benefits of historic preservation Ingrid Gould Ellen and Brian J. McCabe
    • 5. Historic preservation and its even less authentic alternative Lior Jacob Strahilevitz
    • 6. Losing my religion: Church condo conversions and neighborhood change Georgette Chapman Phillips
    • 7. How housing dynamics shape neighborhood perceptions Matthew Desmond
    • Part III. Housing as Wealth Building: Consumers and Housing Finance:
    • 8. Behavioral leasing: renter equity as an intermediate housing form Stephanie M. Stern
    • 9. Housing, mortgages, and retirement Christopher Mayer
    • 10. The rise and (potential) fall of disparate impact lending litigation Ian Ayres, Gary Klein and Jeffrey West
    • Part IV. Housing and the Financial System: Risks and Returns:
    • 11. Household debt and defaults from 2000 to 2010: the credit supply view Atif Mian and Amir Sufi
    • 12. Representations and warranties: why they did not stop the crisis Patricia A. McCoy and Susan Wachter
    • 13. When the invisible hand isn't a firm hand: disciplining markets that won't discipline themselves Raphael W. Bostic and Anthony W. Orlando.
      Contributors
    • Lee Anne Fennell, Benjamin J. Keys, William A. Fischel, David Schleicher, Richard A. Epstein, Ingrid Gould Ellen, Brian J. McCabe, Lior Jacob Strahilevitz, Georgette Chapman Phillips, Matthew Desmond, Stephanie M. Stern, Christopher Mayer, Ian Ayres, Gary Klein, Jeffrey West, Atif Mian, Amir Sufi, Patricia A. McCoy, Susan Wachter, Raphael W. Bostic, Anthony W. Orlando

    • Editors
    • Lee Anne Fennell , University of Chicago Law School

      Lee Anne Fennell is the Max Pam Professor of Law and the co-director of the Kreisman Initiative on Housing Law and Policy at the University of Chicago Law School. Her teaching and research interests include property, torts, land use, housing, social welfare law, state and local government law, and public finance. She is the author of The Unbounded Home: Property Values Beyond Property Lines (2009).

    • Benjamin J. Keys , Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

      Benjamin J. Keys is an assistant professor of real estate at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and a Faculty Research Fellow of the National Bureau of Economic Research. He previously served as co-director of the Kreisman Initiative while an assistant professor at the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. Keys's research interests include connections between mortgage finance, household finance, and macroeconomics. His work has been published in academic journals such as the American Economic Review and the Quarterly Journal of Economics.