Why Building More Affordable Housing Isn’t Enough to Alleviate Housing Insecurity
Housing instability is only a symptom of deeply-rooted systemic inequities—one that won’t be erased simply by expanding affordable housing.
Housing instability is only a symptom of deeply-rooted systemic inequities—one that won’t be erased simply by expanding affordable housing.
Join PIT-UN for a conversation with students and recent graduates in the field of public interest technology.
Virtual
5PM – 6:30PM EDT
Join us to discuss how the Chinese view their own history and how its narrative is distinctly different from that of Western civilization.
Virtual
12PM – 1PM EDT
Tenants with legal representation are far more likely to avoid eviction—but in Forsyth County, North Carolina, that’s easier said than done.
For many graduate students, housing insecurity is a way of life.
Join Future Tense for a discussion with two best-selling authors on the role of speculative fiction in the real world.
Virtual
4PM – 5PM EDT
Black Americans don’t trust White folks. That’s going to have to be okay. It’s also not an excuse for White inaction.
Despite decreased eviction and foreclosure filings, surveys are sounding the alarm: more than a quarter of Americans are housing insecure.
In Indianapolis small claims courts, tenants battle eviction while lawyers do landlords’ bidding.
Government benefits systems were built for those with a stable mailing address—something millions of eligible Americans lack access to.