About the Podcast
UCLA Housing Voice is a podcast hosted by UCLA Lewis Center’s Shane Phillips, housing initiative manager, and co-hosted alternately by professors Mike Lens, Mike Manville, and Paavo Monkkonen. Research on housing affordability, displacement, development and policy is a fast-moving field, with important implications for policy and people. But research findings don’t often get shared with those beyond academia. In every episode, our hosts talk to a different housing researcher to help make sense of their work and how it can be applied in the real world.
Meet the Hosts

Shane Phillips

Michael Lens

Paavo Monkkonen

Michael Manville
Episode Summaries and Show Notes
Episode 10: Upzoning and Single-Family Housing Prices with Daniel Kuhlmann
Many cities are considering ending single-family zoning to improve housing affordability and address historic injustices in housing and land use, while opponents argue that “upzoning” will do the opposite. Dr. Daniel Kuhlmann of Iowa State University discusses what actually happened in the first major U.S. city to end single-family zoning, Minneapolis.
Episode 09: Neighborhood Perceptions with Prentiss Dantzler
The census offers plenty of information about the places people live. Much less is known about how people feel about the places they live. Dr. Prentiss Dantzler of the University of Toronto discusses what we miss when we overlook neighborhood perceptions.
Episode 08: Exactions and Value Capture with Minjee Kim
How should cities approach value capture & public benefit exactions? Florida State University's Minjee Kim discusses real-world examples in Seattle and Boston.
Episode 07: Residential Mobility with Kristin Perkins
How does residential mobility impact the well-being of Black and Latino children? Kristin Perkins from Georgetown University explains.
Episode 06: Financialization with Martine August
Most multifamily rental housing used to be owned by small or mid-sized landlords. But, over the decades, the share of units owned by large institutions has increased dramatically. What’s driving this change, and what does it mean for housing affordability and household stability?
Episode 05: Market-Rate Development and Neighborhood Rents with Evan Mast
Building more homes helps keep prices in check at the regional level, but what happens down the street? Evan Mast of the Upjohn Institute sheds light on this important and controversial question.