Zeitschrift | Ausgabe

Politics & Society 51 (2023), 1

In recent years, housing costs have outpaced incomes in the United States, resulting in millions of eviction filings each year. Yet no study has examined the link between eviction and voting. Drawing on a novel data set that combines tens of millions of eviction and voting records, this article finds that residential eviction rates negatively impacted voter turnout during the 2016 presidential election. Results from a generalized additive model show eviction’s effect on voter turnout to be strongest in neighborhoods with relatively low rates of displacement. To address endogeneity bias and estimate the causal effect of eviction on voting, the analysis treats commercial evictions as an instrument for residential evictions, finding that increases in neighborhood eviction rates led to substantial declines in voter turnout. This study demonstrates that the impact of eviction reverberates far beyond housing loss, affecting democratic participation.

CONTENT

Eviction and Voter Turnout: The Political Consequences of Housing Instability
Gillian Slee, Matthew Desmond
pp. 3–29

State Policy Regimes and Associational Roles in Technology Development: A Tale of Two Metropolises
Xiaoke Zhang
pp. 30–65

When Can Dictators Go It Alone? Personalization and Oversight in Authoritarian Regimes
Andrew Leber, Christopher Carothers, Matthew Reichert
pp. 66–107

The Formalization of Informal Workers at Hyundai Motor Company
Minhyoung Kang
pp. 108–134

Harvesting Influence: Agrarian Elites and Democracy in Brazil
Belén Fernández Milmanda
pp. 135–161

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