Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012

Lack of access to adequate housing in Mexico City's urban core and sprawling settlement patterns have led to numerous social and environmental issues. Current development patterns sharpen social fragmentation and segregation, create imbalances in the provision of infrastructure and services, an...

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Main Author: Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura Alejandra
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/22493
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-224932015-09-20T17:19:02ZHousing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura AlejandraMexico CityDensificationAffordable housingGovernanceUrban coreSprawlSegregationLack of access to adequate housing in Mexico City's urban core and sprawling settlement patterns have led to numerous social and environmental issues. Current development patterns sharpen social fragmentation and segregation, create imbalances in the provision of infrastructure and services, and encourage human occupation of high-risk and environmentally susceptible areas. Furthermore, expansive urbanization has become increasingly expensive, both at the individual and collective level. This has happened because private interests often overshadow public ones; economic growth rather than equitable and sustainable development has been the mark of success. Thus, commercial uses have displaced residential uses, particularly low-income housing, to remote areas of the metropolitan region. Local government efforts, albeit significant in comparison to other parts of the country, have been unable to adequately address this issue. Government inefficiency, lack of inter-institutional coordination, corruption, and lack of resources, among other factors, have hindered the success of housing and densification projects. The present research evaluates recent densification efforts and their goals to increase housing access and repopulate the urban core. Some of the individual benefits enjoyed by residents of densification projects, such as access to infrastructure and services, as well as some of the difficulties experienced by them in the process of obtaining government credits and access to housing are also identified. The conclusion is that only the rigorous integration of environmental and social planning agendas and the renegotiation of concepts of spatial justice will lead to more effective policies and housing programs, and a just, accessible, and sustainable city, region and country.text2013-12-02T19:20:00Z2013-052013-06-28May 20132013-12-02T19:20:00Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/22493en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Mexico City
Densification
Affordable housing
Governance
Urban core
Sprawl
Segregation
spellingShingle Mexico City
Densification
Affordable housing
Governance
Urban core
Sprawl
Segregation
Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura Alejandra
Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012
description Lack of access to adequate housing in Mexico City's urban core and sprawling settlement patterns have led to numerous social and environmental issues. Current development patterns sharpen social fragmentation and segregation, create imbalances in the provision of infrastructure and services, and encourage human occupation of high-risk and environmentally susceptible areas. Furthermore, expansive urbanization has become increasingly expensive, both at the individual and collective level. This has happened because private interests often overshadow public ones; economic growth rather than equitable and sustainable development has been the mark of success. Thus, commercial uses have displaced residential uses, particularly low-income housing, to remote areas of the metropolitan region. Local government efforts, albeit significant in comparison to other parts of the country, have been unable to adequately address this issue. Government inefficiency, lack of inter-institutional coordination, corruption, and lack of resources, among other factors, have hindered the success of housing and densification projects. The present research evaluates recent densification efforts and their goals to increase housing access and repopulate the urban core. Some of the individual benefits enjoyed by residents of densification projects, such as access to infrastructure and services, as well as some of the difficulties experienced by them in the process of obtaining government credits and access to housing are also identified. The conclusion is that only the rigorous integration of environmental and social planning agendas and the renegotiation of concepts of spatial justice will lead to more effective policies and housing programs, and a just, accessible, and sustainable city, region and country. === text
author Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura Alejandra
author_facet Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura Alejandra
author_sort Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura Alejandra
title Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012
title_short Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012
title_full Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012
title_fullStr Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012
title_full_unstemmed Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012
title_sort housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in mexico city, 2001-2012
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/22493
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