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Rights of Way to Brasilia Teimosa - The Politics of Squatter Settlement (Paperback)
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Rights of Way to Brasilia Teimosa - The Politics of Squatter Settlement (Paperback)
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The site of Recife's Brasilia Teimosa favela emerged as a flash
point of economic and political interests in the 1930s and the
scene of subsequent strife into the 1980s. The name of this
district is a contemptuous allusion to the new capital of Brazil,
with its forward-thinking planning policies and urban design, in
stark contrast to the favela. This concise account unearths events
surfacing through periods of revolution, dictatorship, populism,
Cuban Communism, the 1964 military coup d'etat and crackdown to the
amplified reverberation of civil society voices and engagement
decades later. Shifting ideologies and jolting transitions between
regimes directly affected what occurred on this 110-acre parcel of
urban land. Between 1934 and 1984 competing groups and individuals
came to covet this space because of its strategic location and
political consequence. Brasilia Teimosa is about the politics of
ouster and the power of resistance. What took place there still
resonates in squatter settlements throughout Brazil; deplorable
living conditions prevalent in favelas are the result of
deprivation of access to market resources. This work examines the
interactions between the state and neighborhood associations
regarding the allocation of public goods and services in the
context of urban resources and their system of supply. In
particular it focuses on the political struggles of shanty
residents of Brasilia Teimosa that are pertinent to the provision
of and access to urban land tenure. Control and use of public lands
have functioned as instruments of the state to pursue political
projects in coalition with private real estate partners, to
undermine the strength of opposing factions, or to seal populist
pacts with the urban poor who, as illegal occupants of public land,
are locked into a dependency relationship with the state. As will
be shown, the residents of Brasilia Teimosa discovered and
exploited "space" for political maneuvers in order to secure
permanence on a centrally located, publicly-owned site.
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