Residential Expectations in a Neoliberal Perspective: A Sociological View of Social Classes and the Right to Housing

datacite.alternateIdentifier.citationUrban Book Series, Part F1256, 292-277, 2023
datacite.alternateIdentifier.doi10.1007/978-3-031-36017-6_18
datacite.alternateIdentifier.issn2365-757X
datacite.creatorRojo-Mendoza, Félix
datacite.creatorMercado-Cerroni, Claudia
datacite.creatorAlvarado Peterson, Voltaire
datacite.date2023
datacite.rightsRegistro bibliográfico
datacite.subjectClass Identity
datacite.subjectHabitus
datacite.subjectMiddle City
datacite.subjectResidential Taste
datacite.subjectSocio-spatial Structure
datacite.titleResidential Expectations in a Neoliberal Perspective: A Sociological View of Social Classes and the Right to Housing
dc.contributor.authorROJO MENDOZA, FELIX STALIN
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-06T14:22:10Z
dc.date.available2025-10-06T14:22:10Z
dc.description.abstractThe neoliberal system not only implies the establishment of a model based on the role the market plays in society at the expense of the state, but also a paradigm that impacts people s livelihoods. Due to this, the social class structure currently includes a significant number of middle classes and a far smaller segment of workers groups. Regarding livelihoods, the neoliberal system conditions the ways of conceiving and reproducing consumption of various material and symbolic goods, including the residential area for living. What happens when you want to live in certain areas of the city but the economic capital available is not enough to fulfill that desire? In other words, what mechanisms to different social classes use to adapt their residential desires to their objective position in the social system (class position)? This chapter describes the expectations and mechanisms of residential adaptation of people from different social classes in Temuco and Padre Las Casas, one of Chile s largest conurbations with the highest population growth in recent decades. For this, following the assumptions of grounded theory, 60 semi-structured interviews of people from different social classes in these cities were conducted and analyzed. The residential expectations analyzed express different needs according to social class. © 2023 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
dc.description.ia_keywordsocial, classes, residential, different, neoliberal, system, people
dc.identifier.issn2365-7588
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositoriodigital.uct.cl/handle/10925/6965
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherSpringer Nature
dc.relationinstname: ANID
dc.relationreponame: Repositorio Digital RI2.0
dc.rights.driverinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.sourceUrban Book Series
dc.subject.ia_odsODS 11: Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles
dc.subject.ia_oecd1nCiencias Sociales
dc.subject.ia_oecd2nEconomía y Negocios
dc.subject.ia_oecd3nEconomía
dc.type.driverinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type.driverhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2df8fbb1
dc.type.openaireinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citationEdition2023
oaire.citationEndPage292
oaire.citationStartPage277
oaire.citationTitleUrban Book Series
oaire.fundingReferenceANID FONDECYT 1201255 (Regular)
oaire.licenseConditionCopyright © Springer Nature, 2023
oaire.resourceTypeCapítulo de libro
oaire.resourceType.enBook chapter
relation.isAuthorOfPublication76f12ef2-f369-4592-9741-529e93b5bd4b
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery76f12ef2-f369-4592-9741-529e93b5bd4b
uct.catalogadorjvu
uct.comunidadCiencias Socialesen_US
uct.departamentoDepartamento de Sociología y Ciencia Política
uct.facultadFacultad de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades
uct.indizacionScopus
uct.indizacionEmerging Sources Citation Index - ESCI
uct.indizacionGoogle Scholar
uct.indizacionCrossRef
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