Abstract
Drawing on ethnographic research in El Oasis, a highly precarious self-built settlement in Medellín, Colombia, this article examines the illegal practice of autoconstruction as a material expression of hope. It focuses on the multilayered, symbolic meaning of self-built housing, as it represents the pursuit of dignity, permanence, and agency - as opposed to poverty, uncertainty, and lack of agency - and an active and material form of hoping for a better future in the city. The state plays an ambiguous role in residents' perspectives, who conceive of it, simultaneously, as a threat to and a guarantor of their future in the city. This ambiguity becomes materialized in the physical form of residents' self-built housing, as residents either embrace or refrain from making improvements to their houses in response to shifting perceptions about the state's intentions regarding the future of the settlement.
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Moore, A., Eiró, F., & Koster, M. (2022). Illegal Housing in Medellín: Autoconstruction and the Materiality of Hope. Latin American Politics and Society, 64(4), 94–118. https://doi.org/10.1017/lap.2022.31
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