Promises and Pitfalls of a New Early Warning System for Gentrification in Buffalo, NY
Jan Voltaire Vergara, Maria Y. Rodriguez, Ehren Dohler, Jonathan, Phillips, Melissa Villodas, Amy Blank Wilson, Kenneth Joseph

TL;DR
This paper examines the potential and challenges of implementing an early warning system for gentrification in Buffalo, NY, focusing on methodological issues and social justice implications.
Contribution
It analyzes the methodological considerations necessary for developing an effective, justice-oriented early warning system for gentrification and displacement.
Findings
Highlights challenges in creating accurate early warning indicators.
Discusses the importance of justice-oriented approaches in EWS design.
Identifies key methodological considerations for EWS development.
Abstract
Gentrification and its resultant displacement are one of the many "wicked problems" of social policy. The study of gentrification and displacement spans half a century, concerns a variety of spatial, temporal, and social contexts, and describes socio-political processes of across the globe and throughout history. One current iteration of this field of inquiry are efforts to identify "early indicators" of gentrification and/or displacement, or the creation of "early warning systems" (EWS). The current work adds to scholarship on the utility of developing an EWS by examining the methodological considerations required for such systems to serve a justice-oriented preventative role.
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