Neighborhood Desirability and Decision Making in Online, Multiracial, Metropolitan America
UW Social Sciences Building 1180 Observatory Drive, Madison, Wisconsin
The Institute for Research on Poverty hosts seminars on the UW-Madison campus most Thursdays during the academic year. These presentations are free and open to the public. Room 8417.
media release: Lecture by Max Besbris.
While the housing search has largely moved online for urban residents, little work has examined if and how the information homeseekers are exposed to on housing websites matters for their assessments of potential destinations. We designed a unique, geographically contextual survey experiment that uses real neighborhood names and actual online housing advertisement text to test if residents’ ratings of neighborhoods as desirable are impacted by novel information. We find that online housing information largely reproduces the existing racial-spatial hierarchy where non-poor White neighborhoods are rated as the most desirable and poor Black and Latinx neighborhoods are rated as the least, with Asian neighborhoods in between. Residents’ prior familiarity with neighborhoods in their metro attenuates but does not fully explain away these effects and the effect is varied by race/ethnicity with White residents as the most sensitive to novel information. We offer a sophisticated model of the digital information environment in which an ethnoracially diverse population of residents are exposed to neighborhood options, and we detail how our methods improve survey experiment design more broadly. Our results show that relatively small amounts of seemingly race-neutral information can impact residential preferences.

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