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First published online April 17, 2015

Housing informality in Buenos Aires: Past, present and future?

Abstract

As in most other Latin American cities, a principal way of accessing housing for the urban poor in Buenos Aires has been through the illegal occupation of land. Over a period of roughly eight decades, this has led to the formation of hundreds of informal settlements in the city. This article traces the historical development of informality in Argentina’s capital. It shows that different phases in this development, each with particular characteristics, can be discerned. Currently, the contours of a new phase, different from all previous ones, are taking shape. It will be argued that without an adequate understanding of the different conditioning factors of this new phase and an integrated approach to address them, informality in the city is bound to persist and even to increase in size, in spite of the country’s impressive recent economic growth and high government expenditure on social housing.

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Published In

Pages: 1958 - 1975
Article first published online: April 17, 2015
Issue published: July 2016

Keywords

  1. Argentina
  2. Buenos Aires
  3. housing
  4. informality
  5. slums
  6. South America
  7. urbanisation and developing countries
  8. villas miseria

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© Urban Studies Journal Limited 2015.
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Authors

Affiliations

Jean-Louis van Gelder
Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR), Netherlands
Maria Cristina Cravino
Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, Argentina
Fernando Ostuni
Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina

Notes

Jean-Louis van Gelder, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR), De Boelelaan 1077a, Amsterdam 1081HV, Netherlands. Email: [email protected]

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