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  1. Daniel Hartley is a senior economist and economic advisor on the Regional and Community Development Research team in the research department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. Prior to joining the regional team, he was a policy economist and a member of the Insurance Initiative. His primary research interests include urban economics, labor ...

  2. Daniel Aaron Hartley is a senior economist in the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. He studies topics such as housing, urban economics, disaster recovery, and neighborhood effects.

  3. Daniel Hartley. Producer: Almost Genius. Daniel Hartley was born on 29 March 1983 in Santa Monica, California, USA. He is a producer and actor, known for Almost Genius (2015), Honest Trailers (2012) and Smash (2012).

    • Producer, Actor, Director
    • March 29, 1983
    • Daniel Hartley
  4. Daniel Hartley was born on 29 March 1983 in Santa Monica, California, USA. He is a producer and actor, known for Almost Genius (2015), Honest Trailers (2012) and Smash (2012). He has been married to Molly Hager since 2020.

    • March 29, 1983
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    • What Was Blockbusting?
    • The Historical Context: Tight Housing Markets For Black Americans
    • Blockbusting Prevalence
    • Conclusion
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Blockbusting was a pernicious practice in the history of housing and financial discrimination. Commonly associated with neighborhood “tipping” and White flight, blockbusting is an attempt to stir up race-based panic and orchestrate the large-scale turnover of a neighborhood’s housing stock in order to profit from the turnover. Scholars have describ...

    The advent of blockbusting in the postwar period was precipitated by a couple of larger trends in U.S. housing markets. First, housing supply growth was severely limited during World War II, as national resources were diverted toward supporting the wartime effort. Construction fell by about 75% from 1941 to 1944, as measured by new nonfarm housing ...

    We have identified reports of blockbusting in 45 of the 60 largest cities in the U.S. during the 1950s and 1960s. This evidence comes from a careful review of a wide-ranging set of sources—scholarly histories, accounts in the news media, official reviews, and other materials—which made explicit reference to blockbusting activities within a neighbor...

    We have documented the widespread activity by blockbusters in the postwar U.S.—across cities, within cities, and within a neighborhood. In a separate working paper,12we analyze the impact of these practices on the wealth that Black homeowners were able to accumulate when they became homeowners after moving into specific neighborhoods for the first ...

    Daniel Hartley is a researcher at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago who co-authored a paper on blockbusting in postwar U.S. cities. Blockbusting was a practice of orchestrating racial turnover in urban neighborhoods for profit, and the paper documents its prevalence and impact across 45 cities.

  6. 115. 2021. Blowing it up and knocking it down: The local and city-wide effects of demolishing high concentration public housing on crime. D Aliprantis, D Hartley. Journal of Urban Economics 88, 67-81. , 2015. 109. 2015. The long term employment impacts of gentrification in the 1990s.

  7. Daniel Hartley, senior economist at the Chicago Fed, and his co-authors present a forward-looking model of neighborhood choice in which households hold preferences for neighborhood features, including racial composition, and they find that many households strongly prefer to live in same-race neighborhoods.

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