解决住房不稳定问题的无政府主义方法:实施无政府主义策略以实现住房正义

Jayne Malenfant, Hannah Brais
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引用次数: 1

摘要

【摘要】住房权充满了市场住房逻辑的强加:我们对住房的解决方案通常意味着人们必须住在传统的住房市场中,目标是他们为维持这种住房模式的经济做出贡献。本文使用无政府主义的概念框架,探讨了一些现有方法的缺点,挑战了经历住房不稳定的人天生渴望参与市场住房和相关经济的假设。相反,一种无政府主义的住房概念模型表明,住房权优先于需求和机构,而不是充分参与住房市场和资本主义经济,同时认为用于解决住房不稳定的手段必须符合我们希望看到的预期目标。提出的替代方案强调了将无政府主义工具整合到住房部门实践中的潜力,以集中代理,反殖民工作和正义。关键词:无家可归,无政府主义,减少伤害,住房司法,住房不稳定披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。虽然我们认识到并非所有的国家都是资本主义的,也不是所有的资本主义结构都是国家组织的,但在这里,我们将资本主义与加拿大民族国家的相互联系(Dorries, Hugill, and Tomiak Citation2022)定位为解决住房不稳定问题时需要理解的一个重点(Aalbers and Christophers Citation2014)。因此,在本文中,当我们提到国家时,我们讨论的是资本主义国家的反应,反映了加拿大国家结构固有的资本主义组织以及所谓的加拿大国家支持的资本主义住房景观。关于在更广泛的社会服务和非营利组织的背景下探索无政府主义对无家可归者的反应的一个关键例子,见Jensen (Citation2018)。在这篇文章中,我们将我们的分析限制在无政府主义理论,这是基于无政府主义的集体主义概念。这并不包括自由主义导向的无政府主义形式,这种形式仅限于个性化的自由概念,或“无政府资本主义”,因为我们与其他理论家(即Bey Citation2020)一致认为,这并不构成无政府主义,因为它代表了超资本主义/个人主义。如上所述,这些跨部门办法的一个重要警告是,当住房问题与独特问题混为一谈时;就心力衰竭而言,人们固有的假设是无家可归的人需要心理健康咨询。对于直接经历过系统性和国家暴力交叉形式的社区来说,了解歧视如何组织的交叉点并不新鲜(Bey Citation2020)。我们不希望暗示无政府主义的各个方面(自愿参与、先兆政治、集体内部的自治)不存在于其他可能为住房正义而动员起来的社会运动中,然而,为了本文的目的,我们将这个定义作为我们工作的起点。虽然被视为“坏”行为的行为可能会被污名化和个体化,但我们认识到,这些活动中的大部分风险是由于国家的反应、刑事定罪和缺乏教育/支持,这些因素往往比活动本身对参与者造成更大的伤害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Anarchist Approach to Addressing Housing Precarity: Implementing Anarchist Strategies to Program Efforts for Housing Justice
ABSTRACTThe right to housing is fraught with impositions of market housing logic: our solutions to housing generally imply that people must be housed in conventional housing markets, with a goal that they contribute to an economy that sustains this housing model. Using an anarchist conceptual framework, this paper explores the shortcomings of some existing approaches, challenging the assumption that people experiencing housing precarity inherently desire to participate in market housing and an associated economy. Rather, an anarchist conceptual model for housing suggests that the right to housing that preferentiates need and agency over full participation in the housing market and capitalist economy, while arguing that the means used to address housing instability must be in line with intended ends we hope to see. Proposed alternatives highlight the potential for integrating anarchist tools into practices in the housing sector in order to centre agency, anti-colonial work, and justice.KEYWORDS: Homelessnessanarchismharm reductionhousing justicehousing precarity Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1. While we recognize that not all States are capitalist, nor are all capitalist structures State-organized, here we position the interconnectedness of capitalism and the Canadian nation-State (Dorries, Hugill, and Tomiak Citation2022) as an important point to understand when addressing housing precarity (Aalbers and Christophers Citation2014). As such, throughout this article when we refer to the State we are discussing responses from the capitalist State, reflecting the inherently capitalist organization of Canadian State structures and the State-supported capitalist housing landscape in so-called Canada.2. For a one key example of the exploration of anarchist responses to homelessness within the context of broader social services and non-profits, see Jensen (Citation2018).3. In this article, we limit our analysis to anarchist theory that is grounded in collectivist notions of anarchy. This does not include forms of libertarian-oriented anarchism that are limited to individualized notions of freedom, or “anarcho-capitalism”, as we are in agreement with other theorists (i.e. Bey Citation2020) that this does not constitute anarchism as much as it represents hyper-capitalism/individualism.4. One important caveat to these intersectoral approaches, as mentioned, is when housing is conflated with the unique issue; in the case of HF there is an inherent assumption that homeless individuals need mental health counselling.5. For communities with direct experiences of intersecting forms of systemic and State violence, knowledge of the intersections of how discrimination is organized is not new (Bey Citation2020)6. We do not wish to suggest that facets of anarchism (voluntary participation, prefigurative politics, autonomy within the collective) are not present in other social movements that may be mobilized for housing justice, however, for the purposes of this article we ground our work within this definition as a starting place.7. While behaviour deemed may be stigmatized, and individualized, as “bad” behaviour, we recognize that the risk in much of these activities is due to State responses, criminalization, and a lack of education/support, which often contribute to greater harm for participants than the activity itself.
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