“…Research on housing precarity and segregation, for instance, has largely been conducted from a metropolitan perspective-from seminal studies of 'urban spoliation' (Kowarick, 1979) and state housing projects in metropolitan peripheries (Maricato, 1987) to contemporary patterns of spatial segregation (Marques, 2015), housing precarity (Marques, 2017;, fortified enclaves (Caldeira, 2001) and urban occupations (Amin, 2014;Nascimento, 2016). While the analytical focus on peripheral subdivisions has dwindled over past decades, studies on metropolitan favelas still predominate in Brazilian housing studies (Ribeiro, 1993) in relation to myriad questions such as revitalization projects (Friendly and Pimentel Walker, 2022), insurgent planning (Friendly, 2022), claims on the right to the city (Pilo', 2017) and, more recently, mega-events (Richmond and Garmany, 2016) and evictions (Sørbøe and Braathen, 2022). 2 The same can be said of studies on the financialization of housing and urban space, which investigate financial circuits and operations taking place in Brazilian cities and are attentive to how the housing question is defined through alignments between the state, finance capital and construction companies (Shimbo, 2019), 3 particularly in relation to the mass housing program Minha Casa Minha Vida (My House My Life) (Pereira, 2017;Rolnik, 2019).…”