research
Grassroots Agency: Participation and
Conflict in Buenos Aires Shantytowns seen
through the Pilot Plan for Villa 7 (1971–1975)
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Abstract
In 1971, after more than a decade of national and municipal policies aimed at the top-down removal
of shantytowns, the Buenos Aires City Council approved the Plan Piloto para la Relocalización
de Villa 7 (Pilot Plan for the Relocation of Shantytown 7; 1971–1975, referred to as the Pilot Plan
hereinafter). This particular plan, which resulted in the construction of the housing complex, Barrio
Justo Suárez, endures in the collective memory of Argentines as a landmark project regarding
grassroots participation in state housing initiatives addressed at shantytowns. Emerging from a
context of a housing shortage for the growing urban poor and intense popular mobilizations during
the transition to democracy, the authors of the Pilot Plan sought to empower shantytown residents
in novel ways by: 1) maintaining the shantytown’s location as opposed to eradication schemes
that relocated the residents elsewhere, 2) formally employing some of the residents for the stage of
construction, as opposed to “self-help” housing projects in which the residents contributed with
unpaid labor, and 3) including them in the urban and architectural design of the of the new housing.
This paper will examine the context in which the Pilot Plan was conceived of as a way of re-assessing
the roles of the state, the user, and housing-related professionals, often seen as antagonistic. The
paper argues that residents’ fair participation and state intervention in housing schemes are not
necessarily incompatible, and can function in specific social and political contexts through multiactor
proposals backed by a political will that prioritizes grassroots agency