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The Professionalization of a Social Movement: Housing Cooperatives in Uruguay

Jennifer Duyne Barenstein, Michael Pfister
2019
Direct Link to the Article

Uruguay’s housing cooperatives’ approaches and achievements are increasingly a source of inspiration for housing movements across the world. At present, in a country with a population of only about 3.5 million people, there are over 2,000 housing cooperatives providing affordable and good quality housing to approximately 30,000 households. The paper focuses on the historical and current role of the cooperative movement in the provision of adequate and affordable housing.

Housing cooperatives emerged in Uruguay in the late 1960s, relying on a tradition of self-help construction processes and building on the organizational capacity of strongly unionized workers. Thanks to their official recognition by the 1968 National Housing Law and subsequent substantial government support, housing cooperatives expanded rapidly, particularly during the years prior to the military dictatorship that ruled the country from 1973 to 1985. They flourished again under the progressive government led by the Frente Amplio which was democratically elected in 2005. The paper analyses the societal, political and institutional factors that explain the success of housing cooperatives in Uruguay. It identifies how the housing cooperative federations, together with government, and the institutes for technical assistance enable cooperatives to engage in increasingly complex housing and neighbourhood development projects. It is shown that housing cooperatives in Uruguay are not only a social movement fighting for the right to housing for all, but also a highly professional provider of affordable housing through a participatory, socially-inclusive, bottom-up, but also highly institutionalized approach.

This article was published in the journal «Built Environment», Volume 45, Number 3 on «Collaborative Housing: Resident and Professional Roles»

Built Environment

With an emphasis on crossing disciplinary boundaries and providing global perspective, each issue of the journal «Built Environment» focuses on a single subject of contemporary interest to practitioners, academics and students working in a wide range of disciplines. Issues are guest-edited by established international experts who not only commission contributions, but also oversee the peer-reviewing process in collaboration with the Editors. The journal is abstracted in Geo Abstracts, Sage Urban Studies Abstracts, and Journal of Planning Literature, and is indexed in the Avery Index to Architectural Publications.

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This article has been published in the following newsletter edition:

43 | September 2019: Verdichtung / Density

  • Projects on Territory: Dichte Geschichte
  • Form, Dichte und Werte – ein Vergleich von Ökosystemleistungen in Zürich und Singapur
  • «Das Future Cities Laboratory Global würde die ETH Zürich im Bereich der Stadt- und Raumplanung stärken»
  • Densifying Switzerland: Debates and Research Avenues for an Analysis of Spatial Planning Policy
  • Gemeinnütziger Wohnungsbau und Innenentwicklung
  • «In the Next Few Years, There Will be More Automation in Mobility.»
Kurzmeldungen
  • One new institute replaces three others: the Institute for Landscape and Urban Studies (LUS)
  • Spatial Planning Policy Analysis
  • Dr. David Kaufmann is Tenure Track Assistant Professor of Spatial Development and Urban Policy
  • Mobilität neu denken: Erste Nationale Mobilitätskonferenz
Publikationen
  • The Grand Projet. Understanding the Making and Impact of Urban Megaprojects
  • The Professionalization of a Social Movement: Housing Cooperatives in Uruguay
Aktuell
  • Future Cities: Actions
  • The Grand Projet, Understanding the Making and Impact of Urban Megaprojects
  • 2019–2020 MAS ETH in Housing: Kick-off Event
  • Tales of Territory: Anthropocene, Urbicene, Capitalocene
  • Terrestrial Tales: 100+ Takes on Earth
  • Parti-WAS?! Eine Pitch Night zum Thema Partizipation von «Urban Equipe»
  • Methodological Workshop: Writing Commons Histories
  • Sanctuary Cities in der Schweiz?
  • Tagung Landmanagement 2019
  • Launch Party LUS: Institute for Landscape and Urban Studies
  • Unseren Lebensraum erfassen, analysieren und gestalten – Einblick in die Welt der Geomatik
  • Tackling the Global Housing Challenges: Relevance and Replicability of Housing Cooperatives. Approaches and Strategies
  • CAS/DAS Verkehrsingenieurwesen ab Herbst 2021
  • Housing Challenges in Europe
  • Housing Challenges in the Global South
  • gta Invites
  • Architecture of Territory: Territorial Design in Histories, Theories and Projects
  • Athena Lecture Series: Auftakt mit Marwa Al-Sabouni

Chairs

Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey
Prof. Dr. Kay W. Axhausen
Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete
Prof. Maria Conen
Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman
Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein
Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard
Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
Prof. Dr. Guillaume Habert
Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen
Prof. Damian Jerjen
Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Prof. Hubert Klumpner
Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas
Prof. Freek Persyn
Prof. Dr. Christian Schmid
Prof. Milica Topalovic
Prof. Martina Voser

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