If Housing is a Right, Squatting is a Duty: Social movements against selective implementation of Human Rights
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/9258Date
2015-05-29Type
Master thesisMastergradsoppgave
Abstract
The aim of the research is to explore how the homeless movement in Brazil uses squatter
practices as a form of expression of political values and performative enjoyment of housing
rights. The point of departure is the analysis of the Workers’ Party populist government
institutionalisation of the right to adequate housing according to international obligations and
historical national claims, expressed in its official human rights policy and legislation. It goes on
to show how that recognition is intrinsically attached to an official meaning of the disputed
right s , with a convenient level of progressive realization and the validation of the state apparatus
as the only possible mean for the precariat to fight for said rights, thus attempting to curb the
grassroots activism that marked the country’s urbanisation and democratisation process. The
intended result is to generate a body of qualitative data that will reevaluate the importance of
activism beyond the official channels opened to civil society, pointing to the dual dimension of
squats, as immediate solutions to housing issues and carriers of a political message from those
who lack access to said channels. Moreover, construct an advocacy strategy that counters the
government’s monopoly over the human rights language that takes legitimacy away from this
praxis of resistance.
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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Copyright 2015 The Author(s)
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