The right to infrastructure:a struggle for sanitation in Fresno, California homeless encampments

Speer, JessieORCID logo (2016) The right to infrastructure:a struggle for sanitation in Fresno, California homeless encampments Urban Geography, 37 (7). 1049 - 1069. ISSN 0272-3638
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In 2013, Fresno, California was home to more than 5,000 homeless people, many of whom took refuge in sprawling downtown encampments. Citing unsanitary conditions, Fresno officials implemented a policy of bulldozing the encampments while providing housing vouchers to a small number of residents. Yet homeless Fresnans by and large demanded the provision of sanitation in the encampments as an alternative to eviction. In doing so, they invoked their right to urban infrastructure. Drawing from literature on informal housing in the Global South, this paper argues that individual housing rights present a limited framework through which to understand homeless people’s right to the city, and that a truly radical right to the city should reflect the demand for sanitation infrastructure emerging from the streets.

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