Study: Eviction Rates for Black Women on Par With Incarcerations for Black Men

Camille

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Study: Eviction Rates for Black Women on Par With Incarcerations for Black Men

http://www.theroot.com/articles/cul...men_on_par_with_incarcerations_for_black.html


MacArthur Foundation “How Housing Matters” study reveals that while black men face alarmingly high incarceration rates, black women are disproportionately evicted from their homes.

According to the study, in any given year, approximately 16,000 adults and children are evicted in Milwaukee from approximately, 6,000 housing units—that equates to 16 households evicted every day.

These startling statistics only account for court-ordered evictions and do not even touch on coercive tactics like paying unwanted tenants to vacate, housing condemnations or landlord foreclosures.

The brief was based on a recent study in Wisconsin, which followed 11 families through a string of evictions, analyzed 29,960 eviction records in Milwaukee County between 2003 and 2007 and conducted 251 on-site surveys at Milwaukee’s eviction court in January and February 2011. It offers a deep analysis of how evictions sets in motion a chain reaction that exasperates the well-being of already struggling, poor families.

Of the eviction-court survey population, which was 74 percent black, the majority paid 50 percent of their incomes for rent, with one-third using 80 percent of their incomes for rent, according to the study.

The study shows those who are cast out from their homes are disproportionately women from black and Hispanic neighborhoods.

Why are these women more likely to be evicted?

The study explains that there are a number of factors at play, including lower wages, living paycheck to paycheck and primary child rearing responsibilities. Beyond the added cost of larger rental units, children can cause landlords to face state scrutiny for issues such as lead poisoning or be reported by child protective services if the home poses a health code violation. Also, women often under-report unsafe or unsanitary living conditions in deteriorated housing, especially when shared with an abusive partner who may not be on the lease.

One factor that is significant and rarely discussed is gender power dynamics between mostly male landlords and female tenants.

The fieldwork illustrates women typically adopt a non-confrontational and less proactive approach with their landlords when struggling to pay their rent—a tactic that often backfires.

For example, the study points to Larraine, who “ducked and dodged” her landlord after receiving an eviction notice. She explained to the researcher, “I couldn’t deal with it. I was terrified by it, just terrified.”

The study’s research showed that men tend to approach their landlords directly when they fall behind on their rent payments. Sometimes that encounter may dissolve into a shouting match; other times, it may involve the male tenant offering to do some maintenance work to cover his debts. Either way, men benefit more from their assertiveness.

According to the study, for many low-income black women, a single eviction can leave an indelible mark with a lasting effect. Many landlords will refuse to rent to someone who has been previously evicted, and an eviction can bar a person from qualifying for affordable-housing programs. In addition to being a loss of a home, an eviction often is accompanied by a loss of possessions, leading to an endless cycle of bouncing from one problematic living situation to another.

Currently, even though many people are one paycheck short of being ousted from their home, only one in four households that qualify for housing assistance actually receives it, the study explains.

The study points to policy measures, including stopgap measures that designate emergency funds for financially struggling families, which can prevent them from winding up in an eviction court in the first place, and more importantly, making affordable housing more widely available, as keys to reeling in this rampant problem.

In low-income, inner-city neighborhoods, mirror processes are fueling a system steeped in economic inequality: eviction and conviction, the study reveals.

According to the study, “poor black men are locked up while poor black women are locked out.”

Read more at MacArthur Foundation: “How Housing Matters”.
 
many say,

intergration is the worse

thing to happen to us as a people

and Im slowly starting to agree...

we shouldve only intergrated to do business..

thats it...

we intergrated with a sinking ship....

Things MLK was thinking and stated before he was murdered....
 
According to the study, “poor black men are locked up while poor black women are locked out.”

WOW

just... wow

I've never personally been in an eviction situation but from what I hear its hard as hell to evict someone here. Landlords gotta go through the courts and it could takes months if that person fights back in court

There's nothing like that in america? Like the landlord can just come over and be like "bye!"??? Thats fucked up
 
I feel the bottom line is, us not knowing

who we are as a people, results in us raising

psychologically mindfucked self hating slaves..

we throw our children to the dogs to early in life

with no armour of self knowledge!!

we need to stop raising slaves like we been trained to do!

intergration made us feel begging for jobs was ok if you are educated.

we just need to educate ourselves so we can better educate our children...

too much reaction and not enough initiating...

too much defense and not enough offense..
 


study: Eviction rates for black women on par with incarcerations for black men



why are these women more likely to be evicted?

The study explains that there are a number of factors at play, including:


lower wages, living paycheck to paycheck and primary child rearing responsibilities. Beyond the added cost of larger rental units, children can cause landlords to face state scrutiny for issues such as lead poisoning or be reported by child protective services if the home poses a health code violation. Also, women often under-report unsafe or unsanitary living conditions in deteriorated housing, especially when shared with an abusive partner who may not be on the lease.





Hmmm.

Most of these evictions have an adverse impact upon black children.

Does not the phrase "Women-Household evictions" necessarily imply that there were no men on those leases ??? - otherwise, the phrase would be a misnomer.

If so, does not the study also imply that men-less households -- or households where men are not a party to and, therefore, legally responsible for payment of the lease -- a significant factor in the eviction process ???


 
WOW

just... wow

I've never personally been in an eviction situation but from what I hear its hard as hell to evict someone here. Landlords gotta go through the courts and it could takes months if that person fights back in court

There's nothing like that in america? Like the landlord can just come over and be like "bye!"??? Thats fucked up
yo broke ass done lived in a cardboard box or two in your life. quit playing. you can come stay with me though real talk. I love you baby.

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Hmmm.

Most of these evictions have an adverse impact upon black children.

Does not the phrase "Women-Household evictions" necessarily imply that there were no men on those leases ??? - otherwise, the phrase would be a misnomer.

If so, does not the study also imply that men-less households -- or households where men are not a party to and, therefore, legally responsible for payment of the lease -- a significant factor in the eviction process ???



I guess there could be several factors. I didn't have time to read the report pdf that is linked to see how detailed the study was. One thought is that the men that would normally be in the household are incarcerated, but there is probably not anything done in depth enough to see if those households evicted have someone who would be a bread winner incarcerated. I think there would probably be some overlap, but not 100%. The out of wedlock birth rate hovers around 70% last time I checked, but that doesn't mean that the man is not in the household or contributing. Good question tho.
 
I guess there could be several factors. I didn't have time to read the report pdf that is linked to see how detailed the study was. One thought is that the men that would normally be in the household are incarcerated, but there is probably not anything done in depth enough to see if those households evicted have someone who would be a bread winner incarcerated. I think there would probably be some overlap, but not 100%. The out of wedlock birth rate hovers around 70% last time I checked, but that doesn't mean that the man is not in the household or contributing. Good question tho.

Of course you're right, there could be and probably are several contributing factors at play including incarceration. The out-of-wedlock number is scary. Two people able to work in "relative harmony" are better than one; but even if not under the same roof, the financial contribution by the absent party could be at play as well. I downloaded and read the article, but it didn't appear to get into that.
 
WOW

just... wow

I've never personally been in an eviction situation but from what I hear its hard as hell to evict someone here. Landlords gotta go through the courts and it could takes months if that person fights back in court

There's nothing like that in america? Like the landlord can just come over and be like "bye!"??? Thats fucked up

Na What's really fucked up is a landlord can have a tenant who refuses to pay rent for pretty much any reason. It will take that landlord between 6 months and a year to get the tenant out of that apartment. Can you imagine how how fucked up it is not to get that extra income if you depend on it to make your mortgage? People act like landlords can't be caught in the struggle. I saw my parents go through it a couple times which is why I decided to buy a 1 family home.

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