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University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Cambridge University Geographical Society (CUGS) talks > Sam Brandt - More Than a Home: Dwelling, Place, and Poverty in Rural Uruguay
![]() Sam Brandt - More Than a Home: Dwelling, Place, and Poverty in Rural UruguayAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Samaira Gill. How do you house the rural poor at a national scale? This question drove one of the most audacious social policies in late-twentieth century Latin America. More Than a Home: Dwelling, Place, and Poverty in Rural Uruguay is a historical, ethnographic, and policy-oriented account of the origins, evolution, and impact of Uruguay’s Movement for the Eradication of Unhealthy Rural Housing (MEVIR). Guided by the slogan, “To see it rain from inside without getting wet”, MEVIR was founded in 1967 to provide dignified living for rural laborers residing in precarious mud and straw dwellings. A parastatal institution premised on mutual aid construction, MEVIR has since built over 33,000 homes and exists in nearly every small town across Uruguay. A sui generis effort to bring housing policy, urban planning, formal homeownership, and a sense of community to remote areas, MEVIR keeps the rural working poor rooted in the places they call home and away from informal settlements on the periphery of cities. In the predominantly urban field of social housing, MEVIR is a rare case of best practices in a rural setting. Three factors explain MEVIR ’s sustained effectiveness: a clear objective to serve a specific geographical context, a methodology of policy implementation as a process of social growth, and a sensitivity to the scales and places where it operates. As my travels to all nineteen departments (akin to counties) of Uruguay with MEVIR technicians illustrate, MEVIR vindicates the power of geographic knowledge. Samuel T. Brandt is a cultural-historical geographer of Latin America, namely the Southern Cone and Brazil. He is a Research Fellow in Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences at Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge. His scholarly work has been published in the Geographical Review, the Journal of Latin American Geography, and the AAG Review of Books. The recipient of two Fulbright awards, he has also written about Uruguay for a variety of magazines and newspapers. This talk is part of the Cambridge University Geographical Society (CUGS) talks series. This talk is included in these lists:
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