The Laboratory for Housing and Human Settlements (LabHab) was selected in response to CNPq Call No. 58/2022, aimed at creating new National Institutes of Science and Technology (INCTs). The proposal for the INCT “Production of Housing and the City” was chosen as one of the interinstitutional projects to receive funding from the National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FNDCT) of the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI), in partnership with CNPq, CAPES, and FAPESP.
The INCT “Production of Housing and the City” seeks to deepen the understanding of urban production in contemporary Brazil, analyzing the complex and sophisticated interaction between the state, the market, and civil society within a capitalist system marked by financial dominance. Thirty-five years after the enactment of the Federal Constitution and just over two decades since the approval of the City Statute, the project revisits, updates, and critically engages with the contributions of the book The Capitalist Production of Housing (and the City) in Industrial Brazil, organized by Erminia Maricato and published in 1979.
Despite the cycle of public policies implemented since Brazil’s redemocratization, precarious housing conditions and the broader challenges of urban settlements persist and in ways even more complex than those faced by Brazilian metropolises at the time the book was written. In this context, it is essential to assess the various programs and policies executed since then, seeking to move beyond solutions based on a diagnosis of industrial Brazil that no longer yield the expected results in a context marked by economic reprimarization, deindustrialization, and financial dominance. Thus, one of the INCT’s main goals is to understand and analyze the characteristics of contemporary urbanization, drawing on empirical evidence and data science.
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Building on research and analyses developed since 1979, the year of publication of the seminal book The Capitalist Production of Housing (and the City) in Industrial Brazil, organized by Erminia Maricato with a preface by Francisco de Oliveira, as well as on the diagnosis of a deadlock in urban policy in the country, it becomes essential to articulate the evaluation of the various programs and policies implemented since then. The goal is to move beyond urban and housing policy solutions that were shaped by a diagnosis of industrial Brazil and are no longer effective in a contemporary context marked by the reprimarization of the economy, deindustrialization, and financial dominance, factors that have drastically altered the outcomes of housing and urban programs and policies.
The role of centralized planning and the so-called Brazilian economic miracle of the 1970s definitively reshaped Brazilian cities, deepening already ongoing processes of metropolization. This period saw rapid urban population growth driven by migration and the expansion of urban peripheries. Analytically, the concept of urban spoliation, coined by Lúcio Kowarick, already pointed to the theoretical importance of that historical moment for understanding the profound transformations occurring across Brazilian territory, both urban and rural.
The accumulation model then emerging in Brazil was disrupted by rising oil prices and U.S. interest rate shocks. Within a political framework aimed at maintaining elite pacts, President Geisel’s controlled political opening marked a transition without rupture. However, this period of liberalization coexisted with a growing wave of popular demands, for both the redemocratization of the country and the implementation of socially-oriented public policies. Although the rise of popular mobilizations did not prevent the elite-controlled transition, it deeply marked the New Republic and the nature of state intervention in social policies.
In hindsight, the negotiated nature of this political transition becomes clearer, particularly in light of how social issues were subsequently addressed and how policies and programs were formulated to respond to them. In various reports, government plans, and study groups at the time, administrative decentralization was often touted as a panacea for pressing social problems. The strong centralization of the previous system came to be seen as synonymous with outdated governance, incapable of meeting Brazil’s needs. However, adopting decentralization as the core issue led to confusion between concepts such as direct participation, democratization, and decentralization.
It was during this period that the Urban Reform movement emerged, extensively studied and, according to the literature, now facing an impasse in current policies and programs. Is it still possible to center urban policies and programs around planning tools, particularly the strategic master plan? What do comparative case studies conducted in municipalities with differing characteristics reveal about the implementation of these tools?
The horizontal expansion of the São Paulo Metropolitan Region (RMSP), portrayed in the 1979 book, exemplifies the urban spoliation necessary for low-wage urbanization. However, while this process was presented as a national trend, not all Brazilian capitals underwent urbanization in this manner at the time. After all, it was precisely the polarization and centralization of the economic miracle that enabled the development of low-wage industrialization.
The municipalities located in what we now identify as the new frontiers of agricultural expansion, within a reprimarized Brazil, were, at the time of the research that informed the book, either losing population or still operating under a low-intensity agricultural and livestock production model.
The analytical grammar of the 1970s centered reflections on space production around labor and the state-capital relationship, as well as their attempts to generate a spatial adjustment functional to the accumulation process. This diagnosis led to a social-democratic agenda that advocated for changes in the status of labor in society and for democratizing the state, increasing the responsiveness of policies to demands from organized workers, unions, and social movements. While this framework was powerful in inaugurating a new field of study, it is now crucial to understand both the exhaustion of this model and its inadequacy for analyzing contemporary problems.
It remains essential to recognize the importance of this positive agenda as a vehicle for organization and for achieving significant, incremental gains. At the same time, however, it is equally important to identify the limits of instrumental urban policy as a public policy tool for promoting a transformed urban space, especially within a post-industrial context and an increasingly enclave-based economy.
How is urbanization unfolding today in these new frontiers of agricultural expansion? What are the connections to national metropolises in a context of financialized capitalism in which Brazil is embedded? One of the main goals of the INCT is to understand and analyze the characteristics of this urbanization based on empirical evidence and data science.
Thirty-five years after the enactment of the Federal Constitution, a little over two decades since the City Statute, and with the country now characterized by a less industrial and more agrarian and service-based economy, it is time to take stock, of past research, of the results and impacts of policies, and of the development of new prospective investigations.
The INCT Production of Housing and the City is organized around a set of interrelated research axes and lines of inquiry. The first three axes address the different forms of housing and urban production: self-construction and domestic production, state-led initiatives, and private real estate development. The fourth axis seeks to deepen the field of urban studies from this perspective. These four research axes, in turn, are articulated through eleven research lines:
COORDINATION
Maria Lucia Refinetti Rodrigues Martins
FAU-USP
Luciana de Oliveira Royer
FAU-USP
STEERING COMMITTEE
Rosana Denaldi
UFABC
José Júlio Ferreira Lima
UFPA
Jefferson Oliveira Goulart
UNESP
Estevam Vanale Otero
UNESP
COORDINATION SUPPORT
Giusepe Filocomo
FAU-USP
Anna Carolina de Paula Madrid de Marco
FAU-USP
Paula Custódio de Oliveira
LABHAB
Larissa Gabrielle da Silva Noriko Hiratsuka
LABHAB
AXIS 1 – SELF-CONSTRUCTION AND ACTIONS ON SELF-CONSTRUCTED POPULAR TERRITORIES
Line 1.1 – Self-construction, process, product and utility
Caio Santo Amore (coordination)
FAU-USP
José Eduardo Baravelli
FAU-USP
Fernanda Mota Lima
FAU-USP
Ligia Santi Lupo
FAU-USP
Line 1.2 – Actions and technical advisory in self-construction, popular settlements
Karina Oliveira Leitão (coordination)
FAU-USP
Caio Santo Amore
FAU-USP
Giselle Megumi Martino Tanaka
UFRJ
Paulo Emílio Buarque Ferreira
FAU-USP
Pedro Henrique Vale Carvalho
FAU-USP
Marcela Silviano Brandão
UFMG
Lara Isa Costa Ferreira
FAU-USP
AXIS 2 – STATE PRODUCTION OF HOUSING, URBAN PLANNING AND ENVIRONMENT: conditions, policies and programs
Line 2.1 – Conditions of state action, administrative capacities and implementation
Luciana de Oliveira Royer (coordination)
FAU-USP
Anna Carolina de Paula Madrid de Marco
FAU-USP
Giusepe Filocomo
FAU-USP
João Bosco Moura Tonucci Filho
UFMG
Lucas Daniel Ferreira
FAU-USP
Bárbara Caetano Damasceno
FAU-USP
José Júlio Ferreira Lima
UFPA
Victor Martinez Côrrea e Sá
FAU-USP
Beatriz Couto
FAU-USP
Gabriela Martins Miranda
FAU-USP
Layra Carolina Cunha
FAU-USP
Renata da Rocha Gonçalves
LABHAB
Line 2.2 – Public housing in central areas of brazilian metropolises: conditions, programs and policies
Beatriz Kara José (coordination)
SENAC
Ana Gabriela Akaishi
LABHAB
Helena Menna Barreto
LABHAB
Letizia Vitale
SENAC
Rebecca Moura
USJT
Luiz Tokuzi Kohara
Gaspar Garcia
Luis Antônio Rocha Silva
FAU-USP
Maria Isabel Fernandes François
SENAC
Line 2.3 – Implementation of urban and environmental instruments
Rosana Denaldi (coordination)
UFABC
Tales Fontana S. Cunha
FAU-USP
Vicente L. de B. Vianna
FAU-USP
Dânia Brajato
LEPUR-UFABC
Ana Letícia Saquete Gonçalves
FAU-USP
Carlos E. de S. Cruz
FAU-USP
Douglas Tadashi Magami
FAU-USP
Jeanne C. V. F. Sapata
FAU-USP
Rosana Yamaguti
UFABC
Joana da C. M. R. A. Rios
FAU-USP
Maria Lucia Refinetti Rodrigues Martins
FAU-USP
Raissa Dias de Carvalho
FAU-USP
AXIS 3 – REAL ESTATE AND INFRASTRUCTURE PRODUCTION IN CONTEMPORARY BRAZIL
Line 3.1 Real estate and mobile frontiers: finance, digital technologies and the mobilization of nature in the transformation of housing and infrastructure
Beatriz Rufino (coordination)
FAU-USP
Tadeu Lara Baltar da Rocha
FAU-USP
Maria Sylvia Baptista Serra
IAUUSP
Pedro Jerônimo Vianna Baptista Vaz de Faria
FAU-USP
Isadora Fernandes Borges de Oliveira
FAU-USP
Isabela Rodrigues dos Santos
FAU-USP
Pollyana Larissa Machiavelli
IAUUSP
Lucia Zanin Shimbo
IAUUSP
Luciana Nicolau Ferrara
UFABC
Guilherme Moreira Petrella
UNIFESP
Paulo Cesar Xavier Pereira
FAU-USP
Cristina Wehba
FAU-USP
Tatiane Boisa Garcia
IAUUSP
Mariana Cristina Adão
IAUUSP
Amanda Vargas das Virgens
FAU-USP
Line 3.2 Real estate production, reconfiguration of urban area and socio-environmental sustainability in medium-sized cities in São Paulo
Jefferson Oliveira Goulart (coordination)
UNESP
Júlia Catelli de Souza
UNESP
Ana Carolina B. do Val
UNESP
Luciana Volpon Florian
UNESP
Juliana Pete Silva
UNESP
Estevam Vanale Otero
UNESP
Paula de Melo Galafazzi
UNESP
Ana Luiza Favarin
UNESP
Maria Cecilia Batista Feitoza Silva
UNESP
Luma Rocha Dourado
UNESP
Ana Luiza Mói Crosara
UNESP
Ana Júlia Bonifácio
UNESP
Tathiane Pâmella Nunes
UNESP
Anna Beatriz Pianca Krause
FAAC-UNESP
Giuliano Gonzales
FAAC-UNESP
Line 3.3 – Production and reconfiguration of urban area in cities in the legal Amazon
José Júlio Ferreira Lima (coordination)
UFPA
Raul da Silva Ventura Neto
UFPA
Karina Oliveira Leitão
FAU-USP
Miguel A. de Á. Carranza
FAU-USP
Thaís Molon Grotti
FAU-USP
Camila de Fátima Simão de Moura Alcântara
UNIFESSPA
Lucas França Rolim
UNIFESSPA
Renata Sampaio Marques de Souza
UNIFESSPA
Gabriel Pisa Folhes
UFPA
Paulo Guilherme Sousa Chaves Filho
UFPA
Line 3.4 – Recent inflections in the real estate sector in RMSP: interfaces between macroeconomic determinants, labor market, finance, business practices and territorial dynamics programs and policies
Carolina Maria Pozzi de Castro (coordination)
UFABC
Letícia Moreira Sígolo
PUC-Campinas
Luciana de Oliveira Royer
FAU-USP
Alexandre Augusto Teodoro de Castro
PUC-Campinas
Poliana Risso da Silva
IFSP Votuporanga
AXIS 4 – URBAN STUDIES ON THE PERIPHERY OF CAPITALISM
Line 4.1 – Urban studies from historiographical perspective
Mariana de Azevedo Barretto Fix (coordination)
FAU-USP
Raul da Silva Ventura Neto
UFPA
Isabella de Oliveira Walter
FAU-USP
Sillas de Castro Ferreira Coelho
UNICAMP
Viviane Luise de Jesus Almeida
FAU-USP
Ana Cristina da Silva Morais
FAU-USP
João Paulo Davi Constantino
UNICAMP
Carina Serra Amancio
FAU-USP
Henrique Munhoz Clesca
FAU-USP
José César de Magalhães Júnior
FACAMP
Line 4.2 – Metropolis on the periphery of capitalism
Erminia Maricato (coordination)
FAU-USP
João Sette Whitaker Ferreira
FAU-USP
Pedro Freire de Oliveira Rossi
FAU-USP
Fernanda Cavalcante Mattos
FAU-USP
Isadora Guilherme Assis da Silva
FAU-USP
Rua do Lago, 876 – Butantã, São Paulo (SP) – CEP 05508-080
(+55 11) 3091-4647 – labhab@usp.br
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