City Statute

The City Statute (Law 10.257) is a federal law passed in Brazil in 2001 that builds on the Federal Constitution of Brazil to create a new legal-urban order to provide land access and equity in large urban cities.[1] [2] It is premised on the idea of the Right to the city and emerged as a result of many years of popular struggle.[3]

It has two main functions. The first is to ensure that the 'social function' of urban land and buildings is put before their commercial value. This has been defined as "the prioritization of use value over exchange value".[3] The second is to ensure 'democratic city management'. This has been defined as "a path to plan, produce, operate and govern cities subject to social control and participation."[3]

Critiques

It has been argued that, although the legislation is pro-poor, elite actors have been able to use their power to operate in a manner that still privileges elite interests.[4]

gollark: Not really.
gollark: No, they interact differently with `this` is all.
gollark: Nope.
gollark: (it works with non-arrow functions, I just like these more)
gollark: Functions implicitly do it:```javascriptconst thing = () => { let v = 0 return () => { return v++ }}const incrementer = thing()console.log(incrementer())console.log(incrementer())```

References

  1. The City Statute: A Commentary. Sao Paulo, Brazil: Cities Alliance and Ministry of Cities. 2010. p. 120.
  2. The City Statute of Brazil: A commentary Archived 2012-07-06 at the Wayback Machine, The Cities Alliance, 2010
  3. "Implementing the Right to the City in Brazil?", Sustainable Cities Collective, 2012
  4. Misusing the City Statute in São Paulo, Patricia Rodrigues Samora, Polis, 2012


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