The right to adequate housing. Consequences of the deficiency of the Mexican legal framework. Case: Fractionation Yacatitas, Yuriria, Guanajuato, Mexico

Having a home is not just a moral pretension. In Mexico, since the 2011 reforms in the field of human rights, enjoying adequate housing has become a legal obligation, but is it really guaranteed that homes have the minimum parameters to be considered adequate? Undoubtedly, infrastructure, habitabili...

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Bibliografiske detaljer
Hovedforfatter: Jiménez Pineda, Luz Ileana
Format: Online
Sprog:spa
Udgivet: Centro Universitario de Arte, Arquitectura y Diseño 2018
Online adgang:https://www.revistavivienda.cuaad.udg.mx/index.php/rv/article/view/20
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Summary:Having a home is not just a moral pretension. In Mexico, since the 2011 reforms in the field of human rights, enjoying adequate housing has become a legal obligation, but is it really guaranteed that homes have the minimum parameters to be considered adequate? Undoubtedly, infrastructure, habitability, affordability, location and the environment are some of the parameters of housing that are not always met. The purpose of this text is to contribute to the debate on the definition and scope of the right to adequate housing; as well as studying the perception of the inhabitants of the Yacatitas subdivision in Yuriria, Guanajuato, where the deficiency of the legal framework generated inadequate housing conditions, provoking the activation of legal actions to appeal the right to adequate housing in accordance with the international treaties.