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Journal of Planning Education and Research
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Contracts and Retaliation

Securing Housing Exchanges in the Interstice of the Formal/ Informal Beirut (Lebanon) Housing Market

Mona Fawaz

Mona Fawaz is an assistant professor in the Graduate Urban Planning, Policy, and Design Programs at the American University of Beirut, mf05{at}aub.edu.lb

The current housing policy paradigm supports the integration of informal settlements’ housing markets with the larger housing markets. Given, however, that housing production and exchange happen in a continuum of formal and informal processes, this article seeks to look at the effects of this integration on the conditions of housing acquisition for low-income urban dwellers. Based on a case study in Hayy el-Sellom (Beirut), the article traces the changing practices that ensued from the integration of this informal settlement’s housing market in the affordable housing market of the city’s suburbs by looking at how exchanges were secured and redress sought in cases of default. Research findings indicate that the introduction of practices borrowed from the larger housing market did not improve market securities. This suggests that rather than focusing on the formal—informal divide, planners should devise context-specific methods to address locally identified market weaknesses.

Key Words: informal settlements • contracts • low-income housing • Beirut • Middle East

This version was published on September 1, 2009

Journal of Planning Education and Research, Vol. 29, No. 1, 90-107 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0739456X09338523


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