Property and Performance in the Neoliberal Metropolis: Precarium Contracts and Mapuche Associations in Santiago

Matthew Wellington Caulkins

Abstract

The rukas (ancestral houses) of the Mapuche people in the Neoliberal metropolis of Santiago de Chile appear as anachronisms. Existing literature to this date has analyzed them as cultural expressions detached from issues of property. However, this article insists on bringing together studies on Indigenous property –the majority of which are concentrated in the south of the country– with the struggles of the indigenous population for the control of access to urban land. The interviews for the research presented here included coordinators and participants of several rukas, and officials of different state institutions related to indigeneity and city building. The results show how Mapuche associations perform the precarium-tenured sites by drawing on the ancestral and mobilizing memories of dispossession. In contrast, the landowning institutions stage a performance of their absolute control of property as a neoliberal space of rational choice and self-interest. The article ends by insisting on the importance of studying performances of property to understand the social production of habitat in the Neoliberal city.

Más información

Título según WOS: Property and Performance in the Neoliberal Metropolis: Precarium Contracts and Mapuche Associations in Santiago
Título según SCOPUS: Property and Performance in the Neoliberal Metropolis: Precarium Contracts and Mapuche Associations in Santiago
Título según SCIELO: Propiedad y performance en la metrópoli neoliberal: comodatos y asociaciones mapuche en Santiago, Chile
Título de la Revista: Revista INVI
Volumen: 38
Número: 108
Editorial: Universidad de Chile, Instituto de la Vivienda
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Página de inicio: 99
Página final: 127
Idioma: Spanish
DOI:

10.5354/0718-8358.2023.69680

Notas: ISI, SCIELO, SCOPUS