Abstract (EN):
This article tries to broaden the research agenda on territorial stigmatisation. It reviews some
theoretical arguments on the relevance of a relational sociological reading of the processes of
territorial stigmatisation, and proposes a study of these processes during a period of political
revolution and social instability, through discussion of the case presented by the city of Porto,
Portugal, in the mid-1970s. Based on the study of institutional archives, ethnographic work in
several neighbourhoods, and semi-structured interviews with social actors involved in these
processes, the article describes the urban and housing conditions of inner city Porto¿s workingclass
boroughs in the first three quarters of the 20th century and discusses the forms of political
and social resistance taken up by residents from the most dilapidated neighbourhoods following
the revolution of April 1974. The sociological analysis of the actions that gave origin to the voice
of the residents in the historic centre of the city in this period reveals significant interaction with
the processes of territorial stigmatisation, via organised collective resistance.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
Notes:
First Published June 12, 2018