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Special Issue: Housing Policy and Climate Change

A Perfect Storm? Disasters and Evictions

, , , &
Pages 52-83
Received 09 Oct 2020
Accepted 09 Jun 2021
Published online: 13 Oct 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Stable housing is a fundamental platform for individual and collective well-being, and research indicates that a significant disruptive effect of severe environmental disasters is residential displacement. Despite extensive research on the intersection of disasters and housing, the effect of major disasters on evictions remains understudied. How do landlords and renters respond to the economic dislocation that accompanies disasters and to what extent do major disasters lead to evictions? To answer these questions, we adopt a mixed methods approach. Analyzing county-level data on evictions and disasters between 2000 and 2016, we find that disasters are associated with significant increases in evictions in the year of a disaster and the two years following a disaster and that increases in the housing cost burden are associated with higher eviction rates. We complement these quantitative findings with qualitative interviews and archival analysis from Panama City, Florida in the year after Hurricane Michael. The qualitative findings suggest that eviction dynamics may differ by landlord size and identify challenges for small landlords accessing federal assistance, particularly because of clouded titles from unrecorded property transfers. Together, the findings indicate that disasters increase evictions and lead to significant disruption for many low-income tenants for years after the disaster.

Acknowledgments

We thank all of the Panama City, Florida, residents who contributed their insights and experience to this research as well as the staff of Legal Services of North Florida, particularly Charlotte Waters, for their wisdom and assistance. We also thank Daniel Powers, Marisa Prasse, and Benjamin Walker for their research assistance. Finally, we thank the MIT Leventhal Center for Advanced Urbanism for its support for this research and the three anonymous reviewers for their very helpful comments.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the MIT Leventhal Center for Advanced Urbanism, Equitable Resilience Program [MIT LCAU Seed Grant Program].

Notes on contributors

Mark Brennan

Mark Brennan is a postdoctoral fellow in planning. He works on making essential goods and services more accessible to those who rely most on private markets and public programs.

Tanaya Srini

Tanaya Srini is a graduate of MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning. She currently advises on a range of local-level technology policy issues as a fellow at the Ford Foundation and holds research affiliations with the National Housing Law Project and MIT.

Justin Steil

Justin Steil is an associate professor of law and urban planning. Broadly interested in spatial dimensions of inequality, his research examines the intersection of power, space, and the law in areas such as environmental justice and access to place based resources.

Miho Mazereeuw

Architect and landscape architect Miho Mazereeuw, is an associate professor of architecture and urbanism at MIT and is the director of the Urban Risk Lab. Working on a large, territorial scale with an interest in public spaces and the urban experience, Mazereeuw is known for her work in disaster resilience.

Larisa Ovalles

Larisa Ovalles is a Research Scientist at the MIT Urban Risk Lab. Larisa is currently working on a multi-year project to develop alternatives for FEMA post-disaster housing solutions across the US. Larisa holds a Bachelor of Architecture from Cornell University and a Master of Science in Architectural Studies in Urbanism from MIT.
 

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