Volume 19, Issue 1
Volume 18, Issue 4
Volume 18, Issue 3
Two Sides of a Coin? New Urbanism and Gated Communities
How the Other Half Lives: Tenure Differences and Trends in Rental Gated Communities
Gated Communities in the Denver-Boulder Metropolitan Area
Gated Communities: The New Ideal Way of Life in Natal, Brazil
Gated Communities and the Poor in Santiago, Chile
Gated Communities as a Municipal Development Strategy
Volume 18, Issue 2
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Gated Communities: The New Ideal Way of Life in Natal, Brazil

 

Volume 18, Issue 3
2007



Gated Communities: The New Ideal Way of Life in Natal, Brazil

Maria Floresia Pessoa de Souza e Silva

Gated communities have been growing quickly in Brazil's urban and suburban areas since the 1980s, bringing challenges to society through their privatization of public space, conflict with planning norms, and interference with the integrated planning of the cities in which they are built. My article analyzes this phenomenon to establish a clear basis for purposeful public policies in Brazil. The analysis is based on a case study of the first three closed condominiums in Natal. It involves 31 semistructured interviews focusing on legal, urban/architectural, and segregation factors and their implications.
 
Federal and local governments have contributed, deliberately or unwittingly, to the development of such enclosed complexes, which have social and spatial impacts and guarantee that the upper class will remain wealth. There also seems to be a close relationship between the spread of fortified residences and the promotion of a "culture of fear."
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