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Lee Nellis's avatar

Interesting, but if I understand what I just read correctly, natural constraints, i.e. the underlying geography of a city, has greater power in explaining homelessness than the regulations that are featured in the title. And if those natural constraints and the regulations interact, i,.e, the regulations reflect the terrain (and experience suggests that they probably do, though not necessarily in a tidy one-to-one way) then what's actually being measured?

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