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The Political Cost? Religious Segregation, Peace Walls, and House Prices
Author(s) -
John McCord,
Michael McCord,
Peadar Davis,
Martin Haran,
Sean MacIntyre
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
peace and conflict studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.116
H-Index - 6
ISSN - 1082-7307
DOI - 10.46743/1082-7307/2017.1406
Subject(s) - politics , consistency (knowledge bases) , differential (mechanical device) , limiting , differential effects , space (punctuation) , economics , differential treatment , house price , public economics , political science , law , engineering , computer science , monetary economics , international trade , mechanical engineering , medicine , artificial intelligence , aerospace engineering , operating system
The longstanding issue of discrimination and segregation in housing markets has enveloped housing market analysis and particularly the understanding of house price determination. Whilst the relationship of segregation in residential space is diverse and encompasses numerous taxonomies, in Northern Ireland, the high level of market segregation is compounded by the addition of tactile barriers such as Peace walls. The existence of these tactile barriers serves to physically segregate communities and have the capacity to prevent the restoration of normal community interactions and market processes. This paper attempts to quantify and measure the disamenity implications and costs of these hard structures on segregated communities. It achieves this by measuring the pricing effect of peace walls within segregated market areas within the Belfast housing market employing a hedonic pricing approach using data obtained from 3,836 house sales transactions over a one year period in 2014. The findings emerging from the research demonstrate that peace walls have clearly had a more detrimental and adverse effect on the consistency and application of policy and practice. Indeed, the existence of the peace walls appear to have occasioned or facilitated differential practices in housing strategies either ‘side of the wall’. The results show a clear differential distance decay effect limiting market and efficiency opportunities.

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