ABSTRACT

In the 1970s and following on from the deposition of Salvador Allende, the Chilean dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet installed a radical political and economic system by force which lent heavy privilege to free market capitalism, reduced the power of the state to its minimum and actively suppressed civil society. Chicago economist Milton Friedman was heavily involved in developing this model, and it would be hard to think of a clearer case where ideology has shaped a country over such a long period. That ideology is still very much with us today and has come to be defined as neoliberalism.

This book charts the process as it developed in the Chilean capital Santiago and involves a series of case studies and reflections on the city as a neoliberal construct. The variegated, technocratic and post-authoritarian aspects of the neoliberal turn in Chile serve as a cultural and political milieu. Through the work of urban scholars, architects, activists and artists, a cacophony of voices assemble to illustrate the existing neoliberal urbanism of Santiago and its irreducible tension between polis and civitas in the specific context of omnipresent neoliberalism. Chapters explore multiple aspects of the neoliberal delirium of Santiago: observing the antagonists of this scheme; reviewing the insurgent emergence of alternative and contested practices; and suggesting ways forward in a potential post-neoliberal city.

Refusing an essentialist call, Neoliberalism and Urban Development in Latin America offers an alternative understanding of the urban conditions of Santiago. It will be essential reading to students of urban development, neoliberalism and urban theory, and well as architects, urban planners, geographers, anthropologists, economists, philosophers and sociologists.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

A Fabula Santiago

chapter 1|11 pages

Foucault and Agamben in Santiago

Governmentality, dispositive and space

chapter 2|18 pages

The neoliberal urban utopia of Milton Friedman

Santiago de Chile as its realisation

chapter 5|11 pages

Urban universalism

The housing debt in the context of targeted policies

chapter 7|18 pages

Retail urbanism

The neoliberalisation of urban society by consumption in Santiago de Chile

chapter 8|12 pages

Under the politics of deactivation

Culture’s social function in neoliberal Santiago

chapter 9|11 pages

Transparent processes of urban production in Chile

A case in Pedro Aguirre Cerda District

chapter 11|10 pages

Building the democratic city

A challenge for social movements

chapter 12|13 pages

Especulopolis

A play in seven acts. A history of celebrations, displacements, schizophrenia, utopias, colonisation and hangover

chapter |8 pages

Afterword

A conversation with Miguel Lawner