Do the Brazilian favelas have a future for the right to the city?

 

Interdisciplinary Research Conference
Brazil: The Land of the Future?
Aarhus University, Dinamarca, de 12 a 14 de março de 2015
http://conferences.au.dk/fileadmin/conferences/Brazil_2015/Abstracts_-_f...
Theme: Urban space and grounds for optimism
 
Abstract submitted by Angela Gordilho Souza
Architect,Professor Dra. at Universidade Federal da Bahia - UFBA
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Arquitetura e Urbanismo
 
Do the Brazilian favelas have a future for the right to the city?
The Brazilian metropolises have grown into an accelerated and concentrated urbanization process, in a great inequality context that includes lack of social opportunities such as income, education, supply of land and housing, besides inadequate urban environment and infrastructure conditions. The results configure an intense socio-spatial segregation and urban exclusion. In this context, many poor neighborhoods were raised on the city’s outskirts and in the interstices of the old central areas, without appropriate parameters and public policies. They constitute a huge universe of the many slums, villages, invasions, tenements houses and other improvised housing provision, although gradually accumulating significant individual investments, which will persist for a long time ahead. Presently, among the total of 202 million inhabitants in Brazil, 84% are urban population and almost half of that are lives in major cities, where the slums’ population ranges from 30% to 60%. Urban policies developed until then were innocuous concerning the transformation for better cities. Between 1960/80 the proposal to eradicate the slums, transferring the population to peripheral urban sets, was not socially successful, intensifying segregation. The remaining slums were densified and many others have emerged. The democratization process brought gains into the Constitution of 1988, followed by the Statute of the City in 2001, on the guarantee of social rights for land and housing. Since then, there were attempts for inclusive policies, with advances and setbacks. Do the Brazilian favelas have a future? Understanding future as positive changes within the described context, the work to be presented brings to discussion the possibilities that are being experienced currently by the social movements towards the right to the city in Brazil. In this sense, the role of the public University is fundamental. The proposal focuses on recent experience of Professional Residency in Architecture, Urbanism and Engineering at the Federal University of Bahia and its developments. (www.residencia-aue.ufba.br)