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Articles

Rented, Crowded, and Unaffordable? Social Vulnerabilities and the Accumulation of Precarious Housing Conditions in Los Angeles

Pages 60-79
Received 10 Jun 2015
Accepted 08 Mar 2016
Published online: 23 May 2016
 

Abstract

Inspired by the social vulnerability paradigm employed in hazard and disaster research and recent work connecting personal and housing vulnerabilities, this study uses the first wave of Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey data to: (a) examine immigrants’ legal status as an independent social vulnerability that increases the risk of two or more of the following situations deemed to be precarious: renting, crowding, and unaffordable housing; (b) identify the individual-, household-, and neighborhood-level vulnerabilities associated with overlapping housing problems; and (c) identify the distribution of housing disadvantages across social groups. The sample comprises those born in the United States who are Black, White, and Latino, and three distinct Latino immigrant groups categorized by citizenship and legal status. The descriptive and multivariate regression results have implications for expanding hazard, disaster, and housing research and practice.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by Grant R03 HD058915 from the National Institute of Child Health and Development, National Institutes of Health. An earlier version of the manuscript was presented at the 2015 Population Association of America annual meeting. The author thanks Rolf Pendall, Jeffrey Passel, Tate Desper, the Editor, and three anonymous reviewers for their suggestions on earlier versions of the manuscript. All errors of fact and interpretation are the sole responsibility of the author.

 

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