JosephW (Michigan)
Posts: 882
Posts: 882
Posted:
For those interested, I received the following survey request today and am passing it along:
Common Interest Communities Survey: Participants Needed by January 31, 2009
Hannah Wiseman, a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Texas School of Law in Austin, is conducting a survey of residents in common interest communities, defined for the purposes of the survey as communities wherein residents agree to a common set of conditions, covenants, and restrictions enforced by a homeowners’ or similar association. The survey is online at https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=JdAFijUlceVBKVNYSrDjsA_3d_3d and will run through January 31, 2009. Survey respondents’ identities will not be revealed, and the survey is encrypted. She hopes to receive at least three hundred responses, so please pass on the word to anyone who might be interested in contributing to her research.
Ms. Wiseman is originally from New Hampshire but in 2007 moved to Austin, Texas, with her husband, who was born and raised in Austin. Ms. Wiseman first became interested in residents’ community-related preferences when studying land use with Robert Ellickson at Yale Law School. Ellickson inspired students to think about methods initiated by neighbors to avoid nuisances and incompatible uses. Ellickson suggested that many neighbors may reach private agreements about appropriate uses of property without government intervention. But after moving to Austin, to a neighborhood close to the center of the city, Ms. Wiseman wondered whether the costs of individual bargaining are unusually high in cities and suburbs. In such areas, residents often move in and out as jobs and circumstances change, forcing residents to repeat the bargaining process with new neighbors with each move. As a result, she wondered whether reaching a single up-front agreement as to aesthetics and uses of property – as is done through the conditions, covenants, and restrictions in common interest communities – might be a preferred method of neighbor “bargaining.” She also wondered whether people had other reasons for preferring these communities.
When Ms. Wiseman began studying common interest communities, however, she found a dearth of recent legal literature on the topic. Planners, sociologists, and psychologists studied common interest communities in the 1990s and concluded that residents generally move to them for two reasons: to live in a safer place and to preserve property values. While many people do prefer these communities for these reasons, Ms. Wiseman believes that there is more to the story. Some of the existing research has begun to delve into this story, but it is not fully up-to-date and has not answered Ms. Wiseman’s specific research questions. Edward Blakely and Gail Snyder, for example, sent out more than 7,000 surveys to community association boards and organized focus groups in Texas, California, and Florida in 1995. They concluded in their book Fortress America that in addition to preferring common interest communities for reasons of security and property values, residents also “want control over their homes, their streets, their neighborhoods.” Ms. Wiseman wants to know more, however, about the type of control residents seek, and how they are achieving such control. Are people moving to common interest communities to ensure that industrial or commercial development does not encroach upon their residential neighborhood? To have a more “local” government in the form of a homeowners’ or community association? To find an architecturally pleasing community, with quiet streets and sidewalks where their children can play? To find neighbors with similar interests and ideals? Or for reasons entirely unrelated to these?
Ms. Wiseman surmises that there are many reasons for the increasing popularity of these communities, and that many of them differ by resident and region. A private subdivision for retirees will of course differ from one that is conveniently located near jobs and schools. Furthermore, many people may be moving to these types of communities simply because so many are being built, or for affordability and location. But to move her research further, she believes the answers will best be provided by the residents themselves.
Ms. Wiseman hopes that you will consider participating in her short, ten-question survey online at https://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=JdAFijUlceVBKVNYSrDjsA_3d_3d. She is also seeking out residents who would be willing to give more in-depth answers over the phone. She can be reached at 512-232-3646 or [email protected]. She plans to share the survey results with anyone interested in seeing them.
Joe
Joseph West
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