This is an author-produced blog post to introduce upcoming Urban Affairs Review articles. The Online First abstract can be found here.
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Housing and Household Instability
Authors: Matthew
Desmond and Kristin L. Perkins
Harvard
University
Research attempting to estimate the effects of residential instability
on children and adolescents commonly overlooks other changes within households
that may be coincident with—and potentially more consequential
than—moving. Because the research on
residential instability focuses primarily on its effects on children and adolescents
and long has emphasized how moving may weaken familial bonds, which in turn may
be harmful to young people, it is particularly important to observe the
frequency at which residential or housing instability is accompanied by family
or household instability. Because
instabilities may cluster in time, documenting the extent to which residential
instability is accompanied by other forms of instability can inform future
efforts to estimate the effects of moving and improve our understanding of how
residential instability may or may not drive social and health
disparities.
Drawing on novel data of renting households in Milwaukee
that recently relocated, this study establishes the frequency at which
residential or housing instability is accompanied by household instability:
changes in the composition of adults living under the same roof. It finds that over
half of Milwaukee renters who experienced a recent residential relocation also
experienced a change in household composition. It also finds that renters who live with young
children are significantly more likely to experience household instability
alongside residential instability. If household instability often accompanies
housing instability, then researchers attempting to estimate the effects of the
latter should account for the possible influence of the former. This is particularly important if analysts
wish to estimate the effects of moving on very young children, since our
multivariate analyses found that renters with children under 2 had a significantly
heightened likelihood of experiencing household instability alongside housing
instability.
Moving can entail considerably
more than the move. It often also involves a
reconfiguration of one’s household environment. Changes to that environment, this study
found, can imply multiple transitions far more variegated than what would be
predicted by the standard life course model.
These observations open up the possibility for a potentially revealing
line of research investigating which instability is more consequential for
children and adolescents. Future research drawing on different data could
examine which change, housing or household, matters more. Children who at first look fairly
stable—e.g., living in the same apartment for five years—may nonetheless live
with a large number of different adults over a relatively short time period. Relatedly,
studies could investigate how children adjust to different household changes,
as one might predict that different types of transitions—e.g., from one set of
family members to another, from living with a parent to living with non-related
adults—have different effects on children.
Because the complexity of the family has increased, especially in
low-income neighborhoods, so too must the complexity of our analyses.
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The Authors can be reached at: http://scholar.harvard.edu/mdesmond or
http://www.iq.harvard.edu/people/kristin-perkins
http://www.iq.harvard.edu/people/kristin-perkins
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