Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier

Through the analysis of an “indigenous” population rehousing experiment carried out in Mexico, this article aims to understand how institutional and legal norms intended to establish a new social and spatial order can co-exist with, or even produce, the practices they sought to eradicate. During the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anna Perraudin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Métropoles 2017-11-01
Series:Métropoles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/metropoles/5496
id doaj-8f33276480974f43a20c9dac9a1c4fcd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8f33276480974f43a20c9dac9a1c4fcd2020-11-24T21:17:44ZengMétropolesMétropoles1957-77882017-11-0121Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulierAnna PerraudinThrough the analysis of an “indigenous” population rehousing experiment carried out in Mexico, this article aims to understand how institutional and legal norms intended to establish a new social and spatial order can co-exist with, or even produce, the practices they sought to eradicate. During the 2000s, the Mexico City town council promoted access to home ownership for indigenous families living in irregular settlements in the city center. This minority housing policy was intended to compensate for the exclusion of the poor, immigrants and racialized groups from the housing market. It also symbolically acknowledged their right to become full owners and citizens, in an urban city center many sought to live in. Yet, more than a decade after the program started, a considerable part of the targeted population still lives in irregular habitat. Analyzing the interplay of actors and the power relations that led to the implementation of such an ambitious policy, questioning precarious populations’ relation to centrality, this article seeks to explain why most of the irregular settlements are still in use. The paper is based on data I collected during several stays in Mexico City, between 2003 and 2015: interviews with housing-policy officials, analysis of administrative documents and ethnographic investigation carried out in irregular settlements in the La Roma neighborhood occupied by indigenous families.http://journals.openedition.org/metropoles/5496irregular habitathousing policyhome ownershipmulticulturalismMexico
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Perraudin
spellingShingle Anna Perraudin
Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
Métropoles
irregular habitat
housing policy
home ownership
multiculturalism
Mexico
author_facet Anna Perraudin
author_sort Anna Perraudin
title Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
title_short Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
title_full Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
title_fullStr Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
title_full_unstemmed Faire place aux minorités dans le centre de Mexico. Des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
title_sort faire place aux minorités dans le centre de mexico. des squats à la propriété, enjeux et limites d’une politique de résorption de l’habitat irrégulier
publisher Métropoles
series Métropoles
issn 1957-7788
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Through the analysis of an “indigenous” population rehousing experiment carried out in Mexico, this article aims to understand how institutional and legal norms intended to establish a new social and spatial order can co-exist with, or even produce, the practices they sought to eradicate. During the 2000s, the Mexico City town council promoted access to home ownership for indigenous families living in irregular settlements in the city center. This minority housing policy was intended to compensate for the exclusion of the poor, immigrants and racialized groups from the housing market. It also symbolically acknowledged their right to become full owners and citizens, in an urban city center many sought to live in. Yet, more than a decade after the program started, a considerable part of the targeted population still lives in irregular habitat. Analyzing the interplay of actors and the power relations that led to the implementation of such an ambitious policy, questioning precarious populations’ relation to centrality, this article seeks to explain why most of the irregular settlements are still in use. The paper is based on data I collected during several stays in Mexico City, between 2003 and 2015: interviews with housing-policy officials, analysis of administrative documents and ethnographic investigation carried out in irregular settlements in the La Roma neighborhood occupied by indigenous families.
topic irregular habitat
housing policy
home ownership
multiculturalism
Mexico
url http://journals.openedition.org/metropoles/5496
work_keys_str_mv AT annaperraudin faireplaceauxminoritesdanslecentredemexicodessquatsalaproprieteenjeuxetlimitesdunepolitiquederesorptiondelhabitatirregulier
_version_ 1726012500778942464