%0 Journal Article %T Determinants of Homeownership among Immigrants: Changes during the Great Recession and Beyond %A Kusum Mundra %A Ruth Uwaifo Oyelere %J International Migration Review %@ 1747-7379 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/0197918318781833 %X In this paper, we explore factors correlated with immigrant homeownership before and after the Great Recession. We focus solely on immigrants because of recent evidence that suggests homeownership rates declined less for immigrants than natives in the United States during the recession and onward. Specifically, we examine to what extent an immigrant's income, savings, length of stay in the destination country, citizenship status, and birthplace networks affected the probability of homeownership before the recession, and how these impacts on homeownership changed since the recession. We examine these questions using microdata for the years 2000¨C2012. Our results suggest that citizenship status, birthplace network, family size, savings, household income, and length of stay are significant for an immigrant's homeownership. In comparing the preŠ\recession period to the period afterward, we find that the impact of birthplace networks on homeownership probabilities doubled while the impact of savings slightly declined %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0197918318781833