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Discrimination Of Landlords In The US

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Race:
Landlords also employ a variety of tactics that discriminate against racial minorities. Common customs in the housing industry often put non-whites, particularly African Americans, at a disadvantage. For example, screenings for criminal records is a routine practice that landlords use to identify “risky” applicants and isolate them. In fact, the most popular how-to books for landlords identify criminal background checks as the best way to minimize liability (Thatcher 2008). However, criminal screenings disproportionately harm blacks, particularly black males. In the U.S., black men are eight times more likely to be incarcerated than white men. Currently more than a third of young black males without education are in the prison system …show more content…

Women, and single mothers in particular, have difficulty finding and keeping housing because many landlords are reluctant to rent to applicants who have children. Denial of housing to applicants with children is so common that over 20% of all HUD complaints allege discrimination based on family status (An et al. 2013). In Evicted, Ned and Pam feel the effects of landlords’ distaste for children when they hunt for an apartment. Pam calls dozens of landlords, all of whom assert that they don’t accept kids. Ultimately the couple is left with only two options, both in dangerous, low-income neighborhoods with disproportionately high rents (Desmond 2016:235-236). When landlords forbid children, they greatly reduce an urban tenant’s choice of housing and make it significantly harder for families to settle down in safe neighborhoods.
Discrimination against applicants with children affects poor women, especially; in the United States, 46% of all single mothers live below the poverty line (Schondelmeyer 2017). These women typically have fixed incomes and can only select from a limited pool of housing. Bias against children further shrinks this pool. Altogether, the total number of homes available to low-income women with children is miniscule. Ultimately landlords’ aversion to children creates an environment where motherhood is a …show more content…

In low income neighborhoods, violence against women is regarded not as a horrific crime but a mere nuisance to landlords. Instances of domestic abuse often trigger noise complaints or 911 calls and the additional police involvement in the neighborhood inconveniences landlords. Under the doctrine of nuisance property ordinance, police departments can fine landlords for their tenants’ disruptive behavior. When the police punish landlords for noise complaints, landlords in turn punish the tenants responsible. In 83% of cases, landlords respond to a nuisance citation for domestic violence by evicting tenants (Fais 2008). When abuse garners noise complaints, victims don’t face support, they face eviction. Thus, to keep their homes, women stay silent about their partners’ violence. Ultimately, women must choose between being battered and being homeless.
Landlords’ mistreatment of battered women especially harms black women. While black women only make up 8% of the population, they are 29% of all domestic violence victims (Jones 2014). Not only are black women disproportionately abused, but they are also overrepresented in nuisance ordinances. In black neighborhoods, 1 in 16 properties eligible for a citation receive one, compared with 1 in 41 white properties being fined (Desmond 2016:191). These trends indicate that nuisance property ordinances are another way in which African Americans receive different treatment

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