Housing Policies or Housing Politics
- 1 August 1975
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs
- Vol. 17 (3) , 281-310
- https://doi.org/10.2307/174725
Abstract
The policies developed to face the critical housing problems in Chile by the last formally democratic administrations (Alesandri, 1958-1964; Frei, 1964-1970; Allende, 1970-1973), and their relative failures, constitute an important experience to be carefully considered by the underdeveloped world. First, it confirms the existence of the almost insuperable material as well as structural constraints inherent within a conventional treatment of the housing problem in societies of dependentmonopoly capitalism undergoing an intense period of urbanization. Second, the Chilean experience permits us to understand the complexity of social and political actions rooted in the unsatisfied demands for a plot of land or a house in metropolitan areas, with the upwelling of conflictive processes that may be beyond the usual mechanisms of governmental control.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- 3. The Politics of Urban PovertyPublished by University of Texas Press ,1976
- Bureaucratic Politics and Administration in ChilePublished by University of California Press ,1974
- Urbanization and Political Demand Making: Political Participation Among the Migrant Poor in Latin American CitiesAmerican Political Science Review, 1974
- The underdeveloped political science of developmentStudies in Comparative International Development, 1973
- Chile: Nationalization, socioeconomic change and popular participationStudies in Comparative International Development, 1973
- Urbanization as an Agent in Latin American Political Instability: The Case of MexicoAmerican Political Science Review, 1969
- The political integration of lower-class urban settlements in Chile and PeruStudies in Comparative International Development, 1967