Detroit reviewing link between tax auction, housing instability in response to UM study

December 21, 2019

The mortgage and tax foreclosure crisis of the past decade has reshaped Detroit’s low-income housing markets. The majority of Detroit households are renters now, and they’re becoming increasingly reliant on corporate landlords.

New research by Joshua Akers of the University of Michigan-Dearborn and Eric Seymour of Rutgers University outlines the housing policies and other factors that have allowed speculative buyers to contribute to neighborhood instability and blight in Detroit.

The study—which analyzed property records from 2005 to 2015—found corporate landlords buying in bulk are more likely than “mom and pop” landlords to weaken already-weak housing markets by allowing houses to fall into disrepair and eventually be demolished at the public’s expense.

University of Michigan News, December 20. 2019

Recent Posts

Anita Franzione, 2026 Rose Teaching Excellence Award Recipient

The Bloustein School is pleased to announce that Anita Franzione, Full Professor of Teaching, is the 2026 recipient of the Jerome G. Rose Excellence in Teaching Award. The award is presented annually to a full-time faculty member committed to quality teaching,...

Emeritus Professor John Pucher: A Blueprint for Better Biking

"Cycling is healthy.” This simple mantra guides the lifestyle and academic work of East Coast Greenway Alliance Advisory Board member, professor and author John Pucher, who — at age 75 — is a regular rider of the East Coast Greenway in Raleigh, North Carolina. Pucher,...

NJSPL: Detecting Change in NJ Historical Water Bodies Using ArcGIS Pro

As we finish creating digital representations, or features, of historical water bodies for our project to create a dataset of historical water bodies in New Jersey, we begin exploring how these water bodies have changed over time. In GIS, the process of quantifying...