Document Type

Report

Publication Date

2025

Subjects

Housing -- Law and legislation -- Oregon, Eviction -- Oregon -- Statistics, Social justice

Abstract

In an eviction case, the tenant’s housing outcome refers to whether the tenant remains in their home (the unit) at the end of the eviction process. At the end of the eviction process, either the tenant remained in the home or was displaced. Unfortunately, housing outcomes are not systematically recorded as part of the eviction process. In some cases, the tenant’s housing outcome is recorded in the case records or court documents, but this is not always consistent. To address this, we developed three categories of housing outcomes—remained, displaced, and undeterminable—to measure the outcomes of eviction cases filed in Multnomah County, Oregon, even though there are only two de facto outcomes (remained and displaced).

Housing outcomes differ from judicial outcomes, which refers to the legal outcome of an eviction lawsuit. Researchers and policymakers often rely on judicial outcomes as a proxy for housing outcomes. Studies have relied on judgments of eviction to estimate tenant displacement during the eviction process. However, tenants can be displaced during the eviction process without a judgment of eviction being issued against them. Similarly, the dismissal of an eviction case is often assumed to mean that the tenant has remained in their home. In reality, some eviction cases are dismissed because the tenant has either already moved out or agreed to leave. Recognizing that judicial outcomes and housing outcomes are distinct allows us to measure them independently. By doing so, we can use both metrics to guide policy making and program evaluations that prioritize housing stability and retention.

This report defines housing outcomes, describes the method we developed to determine housing outcomes using court records and case documents, and demonstrates how housing outcomes differ from judicial outcomes.

Rights

© 2025 Portland State University

Description

Evicted in Oregon is a research project interested in understanding how evictions happen, for the purpose of eliminating them. The Evicted in Oregon research team includes: Dr. Lisa K. Bates, Colleen Carroll, Dr. Yi Wang, Dr. Minji Cho, Dr. Alex Farrington, Azad Amir-Ghassemi, Natalie J. Cholula, and Andrew Lindstrom. Court case data is coded by attorneys at Oregon Law Center (OLC), and their support for legal interpretation is invaluable. Any errors of interpretation or analysis in this report should be attributed solely to its author.

Report Authors:
Colleen Carroll, Dr. Minji Cho, and Dr. Lisa K. Bates

Contributor Roles:
Colleen Carroll: Conceptualization, methodology, formal analysis, investigation, data curation, writing (original draft), project administration.

Minji Cho: Conceptualization, methodology, investigation, writing (original draft)

Lisa K. Bates: Conceptualization, methodology, resources, data curation, writing (review and editing), supervision, project administration, funding acquisition

Azad Amir-Ghassemi, Alex Farrington, Jacen Greene, and Frankie Spurbeck: writing (review and editing)

Marisa Zapata: Funding Acquisition

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/42984

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