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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Entre o início da crise financeira (2007-08) e a crise pandémica (2020-), Lisboa
estava no auge como destino turístico europeu da moda. Nesse período, numa
singular concentração na capital portuguesa, associações e outros coletivos proliferaram como espaços alternativos, imbricando ação política e cultural. Neste
dossiê, através de uma metodologia qualitativa de pendor etnográfico, mostramos
que estes espaços configuram um modelo de desenvolvimento urbano próprio. Se,
desde os anos 1970, os espaços alternativos têm desempenhado um papel de resistência à gentrificação em vários países ocidentais, o caso de Lisboa sobressai pelo
contraste com um contexto nacional de fraca participação cívica.
Between the start of the financial crisis (2007-08) and the pandemic crisis (2020-), Lisbon was at its peak as a fashionable European tourist destination. During this period, in a singular concentration in the Portuguese capital, associations and other collectives proliferated as alternative spaces, overlapping political and cultural action. In this dossier, through a qualitative methodology of ethnographic nature, we show that these spaces form a model of urban development of their own. If, since the 1970s, alternative spaces have played a role in resisting gentrification in several western countries, the case of Lisbon stands out for its contrast with a national context of weak civic participation.
Between the start of the financial crisis (2007-08) and the pandemic crisis (2020-), Lisbon was at its peak as a fashionable European tourist destination. During this period, in a singular concentration in the Portuguese capital, associations and other collectives proliferated as alternative spaces, overlapping political and cultural action. In this dossier, through a qualitative methodology of ethnographic nature, we show that these spaces form a model of urban development of their own. If, since the 1970s, alternative spaces have played a role in resisting gentrification in several western countries, the case of Lisbon stands out for its contrast with a national context of weak civic participation.
Description
Keywords
Marca Lisboa Gentrificação Espaços alternativos Participação cívica Cultura Resistência
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Rego, R., Lopes, J. B., Mateus, S., & Estevens, A. (2023). Espaços alternativos em Lisboa e a resistência à gentrificação. Etnográfica, 27(1), 163-168. https://doi.org/10.4000/etnografica.13219
Publisher
Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia