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A publicação pode ser exportada nos seguintes formatos: referência da APA (American Psychological Association), referência do IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), BibTeX e RIS.

Exportar Referência (APA)
Pereira, S.M. (2016). Lisbon: a southern European resurgent city. Belfast European Network for Housing Research International Conference.
Exportar Referência (IEEE)
S. D. Pereira,  "Lisbon: a southern European resurgent city", in Belfast European Network for Housing Research Int. Conf., Belfast, 2016
Exportar BibTeX
@misc{pereira2016_1766426296010,
	author = "Pereira, S.M.",
	title = "Lisbon: a southern European resurgent city",
	year = "2016",
	howpublished = "Outro",
	url = ""
}
Exportar RIS
TY  - CPAPER
TI  - Lisbon: a southern European resurgent city
T2  - Belfast European Network for Housing Research International Conference
AU  - Pereira, S.M.
PY  - 2016
CY  - Belfast
AB  - At the threshold of the 21st century the ‘urban resurgence’ debate is gaining visibility. Despite the diversity of perspectives, those who research this issue share one common idea: the recovering trajectory of the city after an extended period of loss and decay. In this paper, I will discuss, in an exploratory but critical approach, some current urban trends that affect Lisbon, in particular its inner city. At least, two main trends seem to occur in parallel: 1º a slow, ‘discrete’, more ‘spontaneous’ and long-term structural process of demographic recovering somehow related with the ‘theories of re-urbanization’ (arrival of new middle-classes and immigrants), which in some cases might produce gentrified contexts - this may have started in the first decade of the 21st century and is achieving a greater dynamism nowadays; 2º a recent, highly visible, spatial and temporal ‘concentrated’ process of change that has ‘exploded’ during the ‘Troika’ assistance program. It is a process of radical change of few historical districts, partially induced by (local) public policies, marked by two general features: i) strong real estate pressure and its growing internationalization/financialization; ii) previous activities and inhabitants displacement, functional and symbolic homogenization towards touristification and de-residentialization (short-term housing). The paper will discuss essentially this trend, focusing in some of its determining factors and main indicators. Finally, a reflection on its expected impacts will be developed - an effort to draw some questions that should frame an urgent research agenda on this on-going, highly visible, but still little understood, Lisbon urban trend. 
ER  -