Title
Living in the city beyond housing: Urbanism of the commons
Date Issued
06 May 2021
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
book part
Author(s)
Pontifical Catholic University of Peru
Publisher(s)
Taylor and Francis
Abstract
Building from the definition of urbanism as the study of the physical needs of urban societies, the author highlights the importance of those needs and activities that are necessarily communal and cannot be reproduced and managed at the individual or small-scale local level and which sustain dwelling in the city. With the rise of capitalism and the accompanying commodification of space at a global scale, urbanism has prioritised the market value of both land and housing. Presently, urbanisation processes are dominated by one political-economic trend influencing urbanisation processes across the planet: neoliberalisation and three of its most fundamental and interrelated consequences on urban centres: privatisation, commodification and individualism. Social mobilisation was geared towards obtaining land titles and basic services and, once those demands are met, communal organisation and mobilisation is greatly debilitated. Klinenberg defines social infrastructure as the physical places and organisations that “shape the way people interact” and that “determine whether social capital.
Start page
333
End page
342
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Arquitectura y urbanismo
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85109230716
ISBN
9780429521775 9780367200961
Resource of which it is part
Global Urbanism: Knowledge, Power and the City
ISBN of the container
978-042952177-5, 978-036720096-1
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus