Racializing the concept of ‘housing otherness’: The effects of temporary housing policies on squatters in Rome

C. Cacciotti
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Abstract

This paper explores the long-standing relationship in Rome between socio-cultural diversity and the temporary nature of low-income housing solutions. I argue that that this phenomenon began long before recent neoliberal trends and the global post-2008 crisis, and instead emerged from the gradual development of a moral and racialized understanding of housing as a ‘social award’. This has created a specific social category known as ‘housing otherness’, which includes migrants and Italian squatters who are experiencing severe housing distress. This exclusionary approach towards the most ‘diverse’ sections of the population in Rome can be traced back to the inception of public housing in Italy during the 1920s. The paper aims to provide a historical account of this process and demonstrate how it is based on the limited availability of residency and settling as a commodity. I also introduce the grassroots Roman housing rights movements and highlights their efforts to challenge the notion that residency and settling should be seen as something that is earned or deserved rather than as basic human rights.
“住房异类”概念的种族化:罗马临时住房政策对擅自占用者的影响
本文探讨了罗马社会文化多样性与低收入住房解决方案的临时性之间的长期关系。我认为,这种现象早在最近的新自由主义趋势和2008年后的全球危机之前就开始了,相反,它是从对住房作为“社会奖励”的道德和种族化理解的逐渐发展中出现的。这就产生了一个特殊的社会类别,即“住房异类”,其中包括移民和意大利人,他们正经历着严重的住房困境。这种对罗马人口最“多样化”部分的排他性方法可以追溯到20世纪20年代意大利公共住房的开始。本文旨在提供这一过程的历史描述,并展示它是如何基于居住和定居作为一种商品的有限可用性。我还介绍了罗马基层住房权利运动,并强调了他们为挑战居住和定居应该被视为赢得或应得的东西而不是基本人权的观念所做的努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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