Homeless Workers' Movement

The Homeless Workers Movement (Portuguese: Movimento dos Trabalhadores Sem Teto, MTST) is a social movement in Brazil. It originated from the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (English: Landless Rural Workers' Movement). Although the MTST can trace its first urban activism efforts to the occupation of Campinas in São Paulo during the 1997 National People's March, this intervention was organized within the Landless Rural Worker's Rural Movement (MST) structure. The first proper occupation as a new sociopolitical actor, distinct from the MST, took place in Guarulhos in 2002. It was named after Anita Garibaldi, considered to be a radical social reformer during her lifetime.[1]

MTST poster for the Quilombo das Guerreiras Occupation.

The Struggle for Housing

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Through direct confrontation and negotiation with the local, state or the federal government, MTST attempts to reduce Brazil's housing deficit by staging squatters' occupations in unoccupied plots marked as Special Social Interest Zones (Zonas Especiais de Interesse Social) that owe property taxes. Determining an exact number on the housing shortage in Brazil is a difficult task to achieve, but several estimates have been provided. In 2019, The Guardian reported 7.7 million [2] while Habitat for Humanity places the number between 6-8 million.[3] By resisting attempts by local governments to evict the poor and negotiating for their conversion into low-income housing, MTST has challenged the neoliberal model.[4][5] In fact, at the national level, previous governments have undermined affordable housing projects, including the emblematic Minha Casa, Minha Vida,[6] but have failed at doing so due to MTST interventions.

According to MTST, there are over 5 million housing units available in abandoned buildings in Brazil. São Paulo, for example, was short of housing units in the 500,000 - 700,000 range as of 2017.[7] As noted before, MTST originally emerged as a faction within MST and focuses on urban reform. Although fully autonomous, the organization has a strategic alliance with MST and also works closely with other Brazilian urban social movements such as the União Nacional de Moradia Popular (English: National Low-income Housing Union) and the Centro dos Movimentos Populares (English: Center of Popular Social Movements).

Political affiliation

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While the movement is politically heterogeneous, in 2017, MTST's leader Guilherme Boulos ran as a presidential candidate representing the Socialism and Liberty Party (PSOL), which signals an ideological cohesion with socialist principles and proposals.[8] On one side, there are branches which resemble a Leninist political party in terms of structure and hierarchy, and on the other side, branches which are clearly committed to goals such as self-management, a characteristic within squatting communities.[9] Squatting is a key practice within MTST and, as such, does not solely have political repercussions, but ecological ones as well. In this regard, the occupation of abandoned buildings and homes, overlaps with decroissance or degrowth.[10] Over time, MTST has developed a more nuanced and multi-dimensional counter-hegemonic stance on class struggle within the Brazilian government's embrace of neoliberalism.[11] For example, MTST's State Collective of Ceará pivots on the concept of “dignified housing” to advocate for other related issues, such as infrastructure for social wellbeing, education, health care, and transportation.[12]

 
An occupation by MTST in Carapicuíba, São Paulo.

History

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MTST was created within the MST in order to ensure representation of land reform advocacy in the urban sphere. According to the João Pinto foundation and the Ministry of Cities, there are six million Brazilian families that are living in undignified conditions. The MTST justifies its activities based on the 1988 constitution, which guarantees property and dignified social living conditions as social rights.[13] Brazilian cities are often segregated geographically between the wealthy area and the "periferia" which translates to periphery.[14] Urban planning and increasing rents has contributed to this segregation, forcing people in difficult economic circumstances to move to the outskirts of the town.[15]

See also

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References

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  1. Movimento de sem-teto reúne 40 mil famílias. Por Cleide Carvalho. O Globo, 18 de outubro de 2013.
  2. Struggles of the Roofless. Guilherme Boulos interviewed by Mario Sergio Conti, New Left Review, July/August 2021
  1. ^ "The Growth of Brazil's Homeless Workers' Movement". globaldialogue.isa-sociology.org. 22 February 2015. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  2. ^ Scruggs, Gregory (2019-07-18). "Ministry of cities RIP: the sad story of Brazil's great urban experiment". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  3. ^ "Housing Poverty in Brazil: Slum Rehabilitation & Social Housing". Habitat for Humanity GB. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  4. ^ Albert, Victor (March 2018). "Justification work: The homeless worker's movement and the pragmatic sociology of dissent in Brazil's crisis". ResearchGate.
  5. ^ Fierro, Alberto (2019-06-01). "Revolutionary Politics of Social Rights? An Ethnographic Account of the Homeless Workers' Movement in São Paulo". Millennium. 47 (3): 398–416. doi:10.1177/0305829819844313. ISSN 0305-8298. S2CID 164731038.
  6. ^ "Land occupation as a solution to Brazil's housing crisis". Equal Times. 8 January 2018. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  7. ^ Sakamoto, Leonardo (2017-11-27). "The future of São Paulo sleeps in an improvised shack". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  8. ^ Struggles of the Roofless. Guilherme Boulos interviewed by Mario Sergio Conti, New Left Review, July/August 2021
  9. ^ "Squatting houses, social centres, and workplaces: A workshop on self-managed alternatives". Antipode Online. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  10. ^ Cattaneo, Claudio (2010). "The experience of rurban squats in Collserola, Barcelona: What kind of degrowth?". Journal of Cleaner Production. 18 (6): 581–589. doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2010.01.010 – via ResearchGate.
  11. ^ Fierro, Alberto (2019-06-01). "Revolutionary Politics of Social Rights? An Ethnographic Account of the Homeless Workers' Movement in São Paulo". Millennium. 47 (3): 398–416. doi:10.1177/0305829819844313. ISSN 0305-8298. S2CID 164731038.
  12. ^ "Homeless Workers Movement – State Collective of Ceará". Fundo Brasil. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  13. ^ "Entenda a luta do MTST | Sociologia Ciência & Vida". sociologia.uol.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  14. ^ Espaço intra-urbano no Brasil. São Paulo: Studio Nobel, Fapesp, Lincoln Institute, 2009.
  15. ^ Villaça, Flávio (April 2011). "São Paulo: segregação urbana e desigualdade". Estudos Avançados. 25 (71): 37–58. doi:10.1590/S0103-40142011000100004. ISSN 0103-4014.
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