
The international squatters'
symbol
Squatting is the act of occupying an abandoned or
unoccupied space or
building, usually
residential, that the
squatter does not
own, rent or otherwise have permission
to use. According to author
Robert
Neuwirth, there are one billion squatters globally, that is,
about one in every seven people on the planet. Yet, according to
Kesia Reeve, "squatting is largely absent from policy and academic
debate and is rarely conceptualized, as a problem, as a symptom, or
as a social or housing movement."
Overview
In many of the world's poorer countries, there are extensive
slums or
shanty
towns, typically built on the edges of major
cities and consisting almost entirely of
self-constructed housing built without the landowner's permission.
While these settlements may, in time, grow to become both legalised
and indistinguishable from normal residential neighbourhoods, they
start off as squats with minimal basic infrastructure. Thus, there
is no
sewage system,
drinking water must be bought from
vendors or carried from a nearby tap, and if there is electricity,
it is stolen from a passing cable.
There is an important distinction to be made between squatting by
necessity and squatting as political statement. In this period of
global recession and increased housing foreclosures, squatting has
become far more prevalent in Western, developed nations. Obviously,
in some cases, need-based and politically motivated squatting go
hand in hand. According to Dr. Kesia Reeve, who specializes in
housing research, "in the context of adverse housing circumstances,
limited housing opportunity and frustrated expectations, squatters
effectively remove themselves from and defy the norms of
traditional channels of housing consumption and tenure power
relations, bypassing the 'rules' of welfare provision." In effect,
beleaguered citizens living in a welfare state that cannot provide
them with adequate resources take action into their own hands and
squat.
In many countries, squatting is in itself a
crime; in others, it is only seen as a
civil conflict between the owner and the
occupants. "Squatters are usually portrayed as worthless scroungers
hell-bent on disrupting society."
Property
law and the
state have
traditionally favored the property owner. However, in many cases
where squatters had
de facto
ownership, laws have been changed to legitimize their status.
Squatters often claim rights over the spaces they have squatted by
virtue of occupation, rather than ownership; in this sense,
squatting is similar to (and potentially a necessary condition of)
adverse possession, by which a
possessor of
real property without
title may eventually gain legal
title to the real property.
Anarchist Colin
Ward comments: "Squatting is the oldest mode of tenure in the
world, and we are all descended from squatters.
This is as true of the
Queen [of the
United
Kingdom
] with her as it is of the 54 per cent of
householders in Britain who are owner-occupiers. They are
all the ultimate recipients of stolen land, for to regard our
planet as a commodity offends every conceivable principle of
natural rights." "The country is riddled with empty houses and
there are thousands of homeless people. When squatters logically
put the two together the result can be electrifying, amazing and
occasionally disastrous."
Besides being residences, some squats are used as
social centres or host
give-away shops,
pirate radio stations or cafés.
In Spanish-speaking countries, squatters
receive several names, such as okupas in Spain
or Argentina
(from the verb ocupar meaning "to
occupy"), or paracaidistas in Mexico
(meaning
"paratroopers", because they "parachute" themselves at unoccupied
land).
Africa
There are
large squatter communities in Kenya
, such as
Kibera
in Nairobi
. A
BBC News report described it as follows:
"The first thing that hits you here is this rich stench of almost 1
million people living in this ditch - in mud huts, with no sewage
pipes, no roads, no water, no toilet, in fact, with no services of
any kind."
An
estimated 1,000 people live in the Grande Hotel Beira in Mozambique
.
The
Zabbaleen settlement and the City of the
Dead are both well-known squatter communities in Cairo
.
In
South Africa, squatters tend to live
in informal settlements or squatter camps on the outskirts of the
larger cities, often but not always near
townships. In 1994, when
Nelson Mandela was elected President, it was
estimated that of South Africa's 44 million inhabitants, 7.7
million lived in these settlements. The number has grown rapidly in
the post-apartheid era.
Many buildings, particularly in the inner city of Johannesburg
have also been occupied by squatters.
Property owners or government authorities can usually evict
squatters after following certain legal procedures including
requesting a court order.
In Durban
, the city
council routinely evicts without a court order in defiance of the
law, and there has been sustained conflict between the city council
and a shack dwellers' movement known as Abahlali baseMjondolo.
There has
been a number of similar conflicts between shack dwellers, some
linked with the Western Cape Anti-Eviction
Campaign, and the city council in Cape Town
. One of the most high-profile cases was the
brutal evictions of squatters in the
N2
Gateway homes in the suburb of
Delft, where over 20 residents were shot,
including a three-year-old child. There have been numerous
complaints about the legality of the government's actions and, in
particular, whether the ruling of the judge was unfair given his
party affiliations and the highly politicized nature of the case.
Many of the families are now squatting on
Symphony Way, a main road in the township of
Delft. The City of Cape Town has been threatening them with
eviction since February 2008.
Asia
India

Street dwellers in Mumbai
In
Mumbai
, there are an estimated 10 to 12 million
inhabitants, and six million of them are squatters. The
squatters live in a variety of ways. Some possess two- or
three-story homes built out of brick and concrete which they have
inhabited for years.
Geeta Nagar is a
squatter village based beside the Indian
Navy compound at Colaba
.
Squatter Colony in
Malad East has existed
since 1962, and now, people living there pay a rent to the city
council of 100 rupees a month.
Dharavi
is a community of one million squatters. The
stores and factories situated there are mainly illegal and so are
unregulated, but it is suggested that they do over $1 million in
business every day.
Other squatters live in shacks, situated literally on a pavement
next to the road, with very few possessions.
Activists such as
Jockin Arputham
are working for better living conditions for slum dwellers.
Philippines
In
Metro
Manila
, squatting is a major issue in Filipino
society, especially in industrialized areas of the
society. Squatting was started after
World War II, as people built makeshift houses
called Barong-Barong in abandoned private-property plots.
The
government tried to transfer those squatters to low-cost housing
projects, especially in Tondo
(in the
former Smokey Mountain landfill), Taguig
(BLISS
Housing Project), and Rodriguez
(formerly Montalban), Rizal
.
Australia
In the 19th century, a squatter was a person who occupied a large
tract of Crown land in order to graze livestock. At first, this was
done illegally, and later under license. This type of squatting is
covered in greater detail at
Squatting .
In more recent times, there have been squats in the major cities.
It would be possible for squatters to be charged with criminal
trespass under the Enclosed Lands Protection Act, but mainly,
squatters are simply evicted when they are discovered. As in the
United Kingdom, there is the law of adverse possession, but it is
seldom used.
In
Sydney
, streets of
terraced houses in areas such as the
Rocks
and Potts Point
were squatted to prevent their demolition in the
1970s. The artists squatting empty buildings on Broadway
owned by South Sydney City Council were evicted in 2000, before the
Olympics.
The Midnight Star was a squatted theatre used as a
social centre, hosting music events, a cafe, a
library, a free internet space and a
Food
Not Bombs kitchen. It was evicted in December 2002 following
its use as a convergence centre for protests against the November
World Trade Organisation
talks.
In 2003, a legal squat was organised for ten people who moved onto
the site of an old incinerator at
Green
Square.
Throughout 1995-2009 in the capital of Queensland, Brisbane, a
number of old buildings and dilapidated back alleys were used as
squats within the vicinity of Brisbane City's Queen Street Mall.
There are roughly 30-60 long-term homeless persons in the Brisbane
CBD at any one time, who typically use squats as a means of
shelter. Irregular intervals can bring 30-60+ short term displaced
people.
A five-year-old squat was peacefully evicted in March 2008, when an
office block in Balmain was demolished to make way for a park. The
council voted to allow the squatters to stay in the building, which
they called Iceland, until the plans for demolition were in place.
One of the squatters said, "About 20 people have lived here over
the years and it's been a place for band rehearsals, art projects,
people practising dance routines, bike workshops. Squatting gives
you a chance to think about things other than how you are going to
pay the rent and ways to contribute to the world."
The
Squatfest film festival began in the
Broadway squats in 2001. It is both a celebration of squatting and
a protest against the
corporate
capitalism of the Tropfest film festival. Every year, a site is
occupied and films screened. The location is announced hours before
screening begins.
Europe
In many
European countries, there are
squatted houses used as residences and also larger squatted
projects where people pursue social and cultural activities.
Examples
of the latter include an old leper hospital
outside Barcelona
called Can
Masdeu
and a former military barracks called Metelkova in Slovenia
. Squats can be run on anarchist or communist
principles, for example, Fabrika Yfanet,Villa Amalia in Greece
, Ernst-Kirchweger-Haus
in Austria
(has legal status) or Blitz in Norway
(has legal
status). Young people squat buildings to use as concert
venues for alternative types of music such as punk and hardcore.
The
eviction of one such place, Ungdomshuset
, in March 2007 received international news
coverage. Others have been legalised.
In
Italy
, there is Bussana Vecchia
, a ghost town in Liguria which was abandoned in 1887 following an
earthquake and subsequently squatted in
the 1960s. In France
, there is
Collectif la vieille
Valette, a self-supporting squat village which has been active
since 1991.
Denmark
Christiania
is an independent community of almost 900 people
founded in 1971 on the site of an abandoned military zone.
In
Copenhagen
, as in other European cities such as Berlin and
Amsterdam, the squatter movement was large in the 1980s. It
was a
social movement, providing
housing and alternative culture. A flashpoint came in 1986 with the
Battle of Ryesgade.
Another flashpoint
came in 2007 when Ungdomshuset
was evicted. While not a squat, it was a
social center used by squatters and people involved in alternative
culture more generally.
Germany
In the 1970s, squatting in West German cities led to "a
self-confident urban counterculture with its own infrastructure of
newspapers, self-managed collectives and housing cooperatives,
feminist groups, and so on, which was prepared to intervene in
local and broader politics". The
Autonomen
movement protected squats against eviction and participated in
radical direct action.
After the
German reunification, many
buildings were vacated due to the demise of former state-run
enterprises and migration to the western parts of Germany
, some of which were then occupied by
squatters. In Berlin
, the
now-legalised squats are in desirable areas such as Mitte
and
Prenzlauer
Berg
. Before the reunification, squats in Berlin
were mostly located in former West
Berlin's borough of Kreuzberg
. The squats were mainly for residential and
social use. Squatting became known by the term
instandbesetzen, from
instandsetzen
("renovating") and
besetzen ("occupying").
Despite being illegal, squats exist in many of the larger cities.
Examples
are Au in Frankfurt
and Hafenstraße
and Rote
Flora
in Hamburg
.
Squatting can also take place for campaigning purposes, such as the
Anatopia project, which protested against a
Mercedes-Benz test track.
Greece
Greece
has a long
tradition of anarchist squats, the oldest one being Villa Amalias and Lelas Karagianni. Also squatted in
Athens
Patision &
Skaramaga,
Zaimi,
Anw
Katw,
Pikpa,
Strouga
and others. An example of a more modern squat is
Prapopoulou squat, which is well known
internationally.There are 7 anarchist squatted buildings in
Thessaloniki, the most famous is [Fabrika Yfanet]
http://www.yfanet.net/. There are also squats in Chania, Volos,
Heraklio, Giannena, Mitilini, Patra. There are a lot of squated
places in university buildings.
Many anarchist squats in Greece have a abandoned garden nearby
which the participants often re-purpose as a
free garden to grow
organic vegetables.
Iceland
Iceland
on the other hand does not have a long tradition of
squatting but homeless people have been occupying abandoned houses
for the same reasons as in other countries. The number of
homeless people in Iceland is not high so it has not received much
attention since slums do not exist. The first political squat was
done on Vatnsstigur 4 in Reykjavik on the 9th of April 2009, 6
months after a complete economic collapse due to bankers that
bought all the banks 4 years earlier. This was done by a group of
people stating that
"capitalism allows banks to own a house and
leave them intentionally empty so that they will rot on their own
and be replaced with a shopping center, using money that didn't
exist and left the debt to the people that many did not participate
in the loan-spree advocated by the banks before depression."
"We will not tolerate that the rich are getting richer and the
society getting less cultural." In 5 days the house was shaped
up, a free-store opened, paper and music publishing had started and
all with support from the neighbours that were excited to get some
"life in the street". The house was gutted by between 50-60 riot
police officers 5 days later and arrested the 15 people after they
had barricaded themselves inside and resisted for over 2 hours
days. People associated with the independent media where also
arrested.In the following week´s the free shop was reopened several
times, the first time it was reopened was on the 6th of may in
solidarity with the Rozbrat squat in Poland.
The second squat was by a group of graffiti artists that put up an
art-exhibition on the 7th of july, 2009.
Italy
In
Italy
, squatting has no legal basis, but there are many
squats used as social centres.
The first occupations of abandoned buildings began in 1968 with the
left-wing movements
Lotta Continua
and
Potere Operaio. Out of the
breakup of these two movements was born
Autonomia Operaia.
Autonomia Operaia was formed by a
marxist-leninist and maoist wing and also an anarchist and more
libertarian one. The communist squats have
marxist-leninist (but also
stalinist and
maoist) ideals
and come from the left wing of Autonomia. In these years born in
these squats the last militants of the italian armed struggle (the
New
Red Brigades). The disobedience
squats (see
Tute Bianche and
Ya Basta Association), which are much
more common in Italy than the other squats, refuse communist
ideology and all its ideals (
class war,
anti-imperialism,
anti-capitalism). They are simply inspired
by the
Zapatista
Army of National Liberation and part of the ideology of taken
the thoughts of
Antonio Negri. Then
there are antagonists squats which are inspired by the
marxism-leninism of the seventies: the
workerism and the
autonomism. There are also anarchist squats. The
Italian squats are known as C.S.O.A.
(Centro Sociale
Occupato Autogestito, "self-governing squatter social centers") and
include: Leoncavallo, Cantiere, Cox 18, Orso, Cascina Torchiera, La
Fucina, Vittoria and Garibaldi in Milan
, Officina
99, SKA, Insurgencia and Terra Terra in Naples
,
Askatasuna, El Paso, Gabrio and Murazzi in Turin
,
Brancaleone, Corto Circuito, Forte Prenestino, La Strada, Acrobax,
Spartaco, Torre Maura, Horus and Villaggio Globale in Rome
, Buridda,
Pinelli, Terra Di Nessuno, Aut Aut 357 and Zapata in Genoa
, Rivolta
in Mestre
, Gramigna
and Pedro in Padua
, La
Chimica in Verona
, Bruno in
Trento
, Dordoni
in Cremona
, Magazzino 47 in Brescia
, Pacì Paciana in Bergamo
, Barattolo in Pavia
, Firenze
Sud in Florence
, Experia in Catania
, Ex-Karcere in Palermo
, Ex-Mattatoio in Perugia
, Mario Lupo in Parma
, Mezza
Canaja in Senigallia
, Kontatto in Ancona
, TNT in
Jesi
, Godzilla in Livorno
, Rebeldia and Newroz in Pisa
, Teatro
Polivalente, Lazzaretto, XM24, Livello 57 and Crash in Bologna
, Cartella in Reggio Calabria
, Rialzo in Cosenza
, Fiumara in Catanzaro
, Cloro Rosso in Taranto
and many others.
Many famous Italian
Oi!,
ska,
hardcore punk and
rock bands, such as
Los
Fastidios,
Klasse Kriminale,
Banda Bassotti,
Negazione,
Wretched,
Raw
Power,
Nabat, and
Cripple Bastards, tour in the areas of
these social centers. Recently, several
far-right squats have also emerged, the most
well-known being Casa Pound.
Netherlands
In the
Netherlands
, if a building is empty and not in use for twelve
months, and the owner has no pressing need to use it (such as a
rental contract starting in the next month), then it can be legally
squatted. The only illegal aspect would be forcing an entry,
if that was necessary. When a building is squatted, it is normal to
send the owner a letter and to invite the police to inspect the
squat. The police check whether the place is indeed lived in by the
squatter—in legal terms, this means there must be a bed, a chair, a
table and a working lock on the door which the squatter can open
and close.
In cities, there is often a
kraakspreekuur (squatters'
conversation hour), at which people planning to squat can get
advice from experienced squatters.
In Amsterdam
, where the squatting community is large, there are
four kraakspreekuur sessions in different areas of the
city, and so-called "wild" squatting (squatting a building without
the help of the local group) is not encouraged. Dutch
squatters use the term
krakers to refer to people who
squat houses with the aim of living in them (as opposed to people
who break into buildings for the purpose of vandalism or
theft).
There are many residential squats in Dutch cities.
There are also some
squats in the countryside such as a squatted village called
Ruigoord near Amsterdam and Fort
Pannerden
near
Nijmegen. Fort Pannerden (a military fort built in 1869) was
evicted on November 8, 2006, by a massive police operation which
used military machinery and cost one million
euros. The squatters then re-squatted the fort on
November 26 and have since made a deal with the local council which
owns the fort.
The deal states that the squatters will
receive a large piece of land near the fort to start a community in
the rural area in between the city of Nijmegen
and Arnhem
. In
exchange, the fort was handed over to local authorities, who will
turn it into a museum, with help provided by the squatters that
used to live in Fort Pannerden.
.jpg/180px-Het_Poortgebouw_(west).jpg)
The Poortgebouw in Rotterdam
Sometimes squats can become legalised.
This is the case with
the Poortgebouw
in Rotterdam, which was squatted in 1980. In
1982, the inhabitants agreed to pay rent to the city council, and
they are still living there as of 2008. The oRKZ (Oude
Rooms-Katholieke Ziekenhuis) in Groningen, squatted in 1979, is an
old Roman Catholic Hospital, which was declared legal in the
1980s.
Well-known squats include the
OT301, Vrankrijk
and the Binnenpret in Amsterdam, Anarres in Dordrecht,
Het Slaakhuis in Rotterdam and the
Landbouwbelang and Villa Vendex in Maastricht.
De Blauwe
Aanslag
in The
Hague
was evicted in 2003.
Squatting gained a legal basis in the Netherlands in 1971, when the
Supreme Court ruled that the concept of domestic peace
(
huisvrede) (which means a house cannot be entered without
the permission of the current user) also applied to squatters.
Since then, the owner of the building must take the squatters to
court (or take illegal action) in order to evict them. A law was
passed in 1994 which made it illegal to squat a building which was
empty for less than one year.
There have been moves to ban squatting. In 1978, the Council of
Churches launched a protest which scotched the idea. In June 2006,
two ministers from the
Dutch
government (
Sybilla Dekker and
Piet Hein Donner) proposed a plan
to make squatting illegal. Other ministers, such as
Alexander Pechtold, were not in favor of
this plan. Representatives of the four largest Dutch cities wrote a
letter stating that it would not be in their interest to ban
squatting. Squatters nationwide made banners and hung them on their
squats in protest.
Spain

Famous
okupas squat near Parc
Güell, overlooking Barcelonathe—
Bloques Fantasmas close to
kasa de la Muntanya
Squatting
became popular in Spain
in the 1960s
and 1970s as a result of the shortage of urban accommodation during
the rural exodus. It was revived
in the mid-1980s during the
La
Movida Madrileña, under the name of the
okupa
movement, when thousands of illegal squats were legalized.
Influenced by the British Levellers, the movement's popularity rose
again during the 1990s, once more due to a housing crisis, this
time related to the
1992 Summer
Olympics and the concomitant urban regeneration. Property
speculation and house
price
inflation continue to catalyze
okupa activism.
Related to the
anarchist
movement,
okupas support the ideal of
Autogestion and create social
centers, such as
Patio Maravillas
in Madrid, which carry out various
grassroots activities. The
okupa
movement represents a highly politicized form of squatting, so much
so that participants often claim they live in squats as a form of
political protest first and foremost. The movement is involved in
various other social struggles, including the
alter-globalization movement. In 1996,
during
José María Aznar's
presidency, the first specific legislation against squatting was
passed and became the prelude to many squat evictions.
In the barrio of
Lavapiés
in Madrid
, the
Eskalera Karakola was a feminist self-managed squat, which was active from
1996 to 2005 and participated in the nextGENDERation
network. Other examples are the Escuela Popular de
Prosperidad (
La Prospe) o Minuesa.
As of 2007, there were approximately 200 occupied houses in
Barcelona. At least 45 of these, as
Infousurpa, a collective event calendar,
mentions, are used as social and cultural centers—so- called "open
houses". A number of popular
rock
groups have come out of this kind
of venue, such as
Sin Dios,
Extremoduro,
Kolumna
Durruti, Refugio and
Platero y Tu
in Madrid and
Ojos de Brujo and
Gadjo in Barcelona.
The
Basque Country
is another area where a high number of houses are occupied. There
are at least 46 squats, or
gaztetxes ("youth's houses" in
the Basque language). During the
1980s, a house was occupied by squatters in almost every town, and
the booming
punk movement used them
to organize concert tours and expositions. During the last 10
years, at least 15
gaztetxes have closed down, often after
protests and clashes with the police .
The most well-known
gaztetxe currently is from Gasteiz
. Squatting has always been related with the
Basque independence movement. In the French Basque Country, there
are at least five other squat houses.
Image:occupied_house_in_barcelona_1.jpg|
Kasa de la
Muntanya,
Barcelona-VallcarcaImage:Barcelona_okupa_Can_Vies.jpg|
C.S.A.
Can Vies,
Barcelona-SantsImage:Barcelona_okupa_ptgeConradi.jpg|
Casa sense
nom and
Ateneu popular de l'Eixample, Barcelona-La
Sagrada FamiliaImage:Barcelona_okupa_Ruina_Amalia.jpg|
Ruïna
Amàlia,
BarcelonaImage:Barcelona_okupa_Bahia_view.jpg|
Bahía,
Barcelona-SantsImage:Barcelona_okupa_Bahia.jpg|
BahíaFile:Can_Masdeu_-_Centro_Social_Ocupado_con_huertos.JPG|Can Masdeu
, Barcelona-Collserola
Switzerland
There are
squats in the Swiss
cities of
Berne
, Geneva
, Winterthur
, Lausanne
, Bienne
and
Zürich
.
The
RHINO
("Retour des Habitants dans les
Immeubles
Non-Occupés"; in English, "Return
of Inhabitants to Non-Occupied Buildings") was a 19-year-long squat
in Geneva
.
It
occupied two buildings on the Boulevard des Philosophes, a few
blocks away from the main campus of the University
of Geneva
. The RHINO organisation often faced legal
troubles, and Geneva police evicted the inhabitants on July 23,
2007.
United Kingdom
In
England
and Wales
, the term
squatting usually refers to occupying an empty house in a
city. The owner of the house must go through various legal
proceedings before
evicting squatters.
Squatting is regarded in law as a
civil, not a
criminal, matter. However, if there is evidence
of
forced entry, then this is
regarded as
criminal damage, and the
police have the powers to remove the occupants. If the squatter
legally occupies the house, then the owner must prove in court that
they have a right to live in the property and that the squatter
does not, while the squatter has the opportunity to claim there is
not sufficient proof or that the proper legal steps have not been
taken. In order to occupy a house legally, a squatter must have
exclusive access to that property, that is, be able to open and
lock an entrance. The property should be secure in the same way as
a normal residence, with no broken windows or locks.
In 2003, it was estimated that there were 15,000 squatters in
England and Wales.
The legal process of eviction can take a month or longer, perhaps
even years. This is what happens when the property is owned by a
council or a
housing association. Private
landlords have been known to use various
intimidatory methods to convince a squatter to move out or indeed,
to pay squatters to leave.
Local Authority Housing Departments, facing rising court costs when
evicting squatters, often resort to taking out the plumbing and
toilets in empty buildings to deter squatters. In the 1970s, some
housing councils would attempt to deter squatters from entering
their properties by "gutting" the houses. "Gutting" refers to the
process by which empty houses are rendered uninhabitable by pouring
concrete into toilets and sinks or smashing the ceilings and
staircases.
To show that the occupier of the squatted building is in fact in
physical possession of the property, squatters often put up a legal
warning known as a "Section 6", a copy of which is often displayed
on the front door. Doing so attempts to claim that there are people
living there and they have a legal right to be there. It also
claims that anyone —even the technical owner of the property—who
tries to enter the building without permission is committing an
offence. These claims are fallible following amendments to the law
in 1994.
Some properties are still occupied by squatters who have resisted
eviction for 20 years. Squatters have a right to claim ownership of
a dwelling after 12 years of having lived there if no one else
claims it, by adverse possession under
common
law. In practice, this can be difficult, since the squatter
must prove in a
court of law that he or she
has lived in the building continuously for the whole 12 years.
For
example, St Agnes
Place
in London
had been
lived in for 30 years until November 29, 2005, when Lambeth
Council
evicted the entire street. The law of
adverse possession has been fundamentally altered following the
passing of the
Land
Registration Act 2002. In effect, after 10 years of actual
physical possession, a squatter must apply to the
Land Registry to have their title
recognised as the owner in
fee simple.
The original owner of the property will receive notification from
the Land Registry and will be able to defeat the application by
simple objection. Obviously, this will seriously curtail the
ability of squatters to claim adverse possession.
In
London, a group called the Advisory
Service for Squatters
runs a volunteer service helping
squatters. It publishes the
Squatters' Handbook and
has drafted a legal warning to be used by squatters. In the late
1960s, the Family Squatters Advisory Service (FSAS) was founded in
London, England, to help defend the rights of squatters.However, in
the 1973 case of
McPhail vs. Persons Unknown, the Court of
Appeals stated that a landowner could re-enter a squatted property
and use reasonable force to evict those occupying the property,
while remaining exempt from the Forcible Entry Act. Thus, as a
result of this ruling, all power lay in the hands of the possessor
of the property, rather than the occupants. This case sparked a
division amongst those fighting for squatters' rights at the FSAS,
for new-wave advocates thought that the FSAS did not do enough to
protect the unlicensed squatters' rights. That division birthed a
different organization called the All London Squatters (ALS). The
ALS was geared more toward direct action and was open to licensed
and unlicensed squatters. ALS was perceived as more militant. As
tensions heightened in London, FSAS split even further. The
division between those for and opposed to unlicensed squatters grew
deeper, and by 1975, divisions within the group led to its
dissolution. In its wake grew a new organization called the
Advisory Service for Squatters (ASS). Since the first copy was
published in 1976, there have been thirteen subsequent editions,
which can be purchased for a small fee from the Advisory Service.
The
Squatters' Handbook details guidelines on how to find
property to squat in, what to do in confrontations with the police,
how to maintain the property and set up temporary plumbing, and
generally how to survive while squatting. According to the Advisory
Service website, the
Squatters' Handbook is in high
demand, which speaks to the rising number of squatters in this
current period of global recession.
The most
empty homes in the UK are in Birmingham
(17,490), Liverpool
(15,692) and Manchester
(14,017). North West England has the most empty
homes (135,106), which is close to 5% of its housing.
The fewest empty
homes are in South East England
and East
Anglia
, but there are currently thousands of empty homes
in London, where house prices have traditionally been higher as a
percentage of the average wage than elsewhere in the
UK.
History
In 1649
at Saint George's Hill, Walton-on-Thames
in Surrey
, Gerrard
Winstanley and others calling themselves The True Levellers occupied disused common land and cultivated it collectively in
the hope that their actions would inspire other poor people to
follow their lead. Gerrard Winstanley stated that "the
poorest man hath as true a title and just right to the land as the
richest man". While the True Levellers, later more commonly known
as the Diggers, were perhaps not the first squatters in England,
their story illustrates the heritage of squatting as a form of
radical direct action.
More recently, there was a huge squatting movement involving
ex-servicemen and their families following
World War II. This involved thousands of people
occupying sites as diverse as former
military bases and luxury
apartment blocks in
West
London.
The 1960s saw the development of the Family Squatting Movement,
which sought to mobilise people to take control of empty properties
and use them to house homeless families from the
Council Housing Waiting List.
This movement was
originally based in London (where Ron Bailey and Jim Radford were
instrumental in helping to establish family squatting campaigns in
several London boroughs), and several
local Family Squatting Associations signed agreements with Borough Councils to use empty
properties under licence (although only after some lengthy and
bitter campaigns had been fought—most particularly in the Boroughs
of Redbridge
and Southwark
).
In 1969,
members of the London Street Commune
squatted a mansion at 144 Piccadilly in central
London to highlight the issue of homelessness but were quickly
evicted.
In the early 1970s, Ron Bailey and Jim Radford were closely
involved in founding the Family Squatting Advisory Service, which
promoted and provided information for Family Squatting Associations
and direct-action Housing Campaigns. However, there was a growing
conflict between the original activists of the Family Squatting
Movement and a newer wave of squatters who simply rejected the
right of landlords to charge rent and who believed (or claimed to)
that seizing property and living rent-free was a revolutionary
political act. These new-wave squatters (often young and single
rather than homeless families) were a mixture of anarchists,
Trotskyists—the
International Marxist Group
(IMG) being especially prominent—and self-proclaimed
hippie dropouts, and they
denounced the idea that squatters should seek to make agreements
with local Councils to use empty property and that Squatting
Associations should then become landlords (or Self Help Housing
Associations as they were sometimes styled) in their own right and
charge
rent.
In 1979,
there were estimated to be 50,000 squatters throughout Britain,
with the majority (30,000) living in London
.Kearns, K
(1979) Intraurban Squatting in London,Annals of the
Association of American Geographers, Vol. 69, No. 4 (December
1979), pp. 589-598 There was a London's Squatters' Union in which
Piers Corbyn was involved. For eighteen
months, it was housed at Huntley Street, where over 150 people
lived in 52 flats. The union organised festivals and provided homes
for the homeless.
Currently, there are a growing number of art squats in the United
Kingdom. Many young artists cannot afford to rent studio or gallery
space, and abandoned buildings provide them with both. One
Bristol-based group called Artspace Lifespace has occupied an
abandoned police station since 1992 and converted it into a
community arts center, changing holding cells into gallery space.
The founder of Artspace Lifespace stated of young artists in the
recession, "I imagine they're quite disillusioned to have come out
on this downturn. I think a lot of people are looking for
alternatives," of which squatting is just one.
The artists who are hot to squat...
Hoby, Hermione,
The Observer, April 2009 Contemporary
squatting in England is primarily a youth-based initiative, as an
artist of the !WOWOW! collective in East London describes, "I was
obsessed with the idea of it, but also with getting to London and
being part of a dynamic group of young people doing things."
Scotland
Squatting
is a criminal offence in Scotland
, punishable by a fine or even imprisonment.
The owner or lawful occupier of the property has the right to evict
squatters without notice or applying to the court for an eviction
order, although when evicting, they cannot do anything that would
break the law, for example, use violence.
Wales
In 16th- and 17th-century Wales, an expansion in population as well
as
taxation policy led to a move of people
into the Welsh countryside, where they squatted on
common land. These squatters built their own
property under the assumption of a fictional piece of folklore,
leading to the developments of small holdings around a
Tŷ unnos, or "house in a night".
North America
Mexico
In
Mexico
, squatters are known as paracaidistas (that is, "paratroopers", because they "drop" themselves
mostly at unoccupied lands), and it is a common practice in large
cities. Since the most valuable real property is located
near the downtowns of the cities, the
paracaidistas
usually establish slums at unoccupied lands at the outskirts of the
cities. Since Mexican laws establish that an individual may take
legal possession of a property after five years of peaceful
occupation, many
paracaidistas establish themselves with
the hope that the legal owner will not discover them and expel them
before five years.
Large extensions of many Mexican cities were
established originally as squats (for example, Nezahualcoyotl
, in Mexico
City
).Squatting has also been used with political
purposes, with more of one political parties promising existing
squatters to legalize their situation if they support their
candidates in the elections; or sometimes with the purpose to serve
as human obstacles for another party, ocuping the space that was
going to be used for constructing public buildings or parks.
United States of America
In the
United
States
, squatting laws vary from state to state and city
to city. For the most part, it is rarely tolerated to any
degree for long, particularly in cities. There have been a few
exceptions, notably in 2002 when the New York City administration
agreed to turn over 11 buildings in the Lower East Side, which had
been squatted in, to an established non-profit, on the condition
that the apartments would later be turned over to the tenants as
low-income
housing cooperatives.
Occupancy Issues
Laws based on a contract-ownership interpretation of property make
it easy for deed holders to evict squatters under
loitering or trespassing laws. The situation is
more complicated for legal residents who fail to make rent or
mortgage payments, but the result is
largely the same.
Most squatting in the US is dependent on law enforcement, and the
person legally considered to be the owner of the property being
unaware of the occupants. Often, the most important factors in the
longevity of squats in the US are apathy of the owner and the
likeliness of neighbors to call the police. This was not always the
case, particularly in the era of
Westward
expansion, wherein the
federal government
specifically recognized the rights of squatters. For example, see
the
Preemption Act of 1841.
Legal Protections
The United States
Homestead Act
legally recognized the concept of
homesteading and distinguished it from
squatting, since it gave homesteaders permission to occupy
unclaimed lands. Additionally,
US states
that have a shortage of housing tend to tolerate squatters in
property awaiting redevelopment until the developer is ready to
begin work. However, at that point, the laws tend to be enforced.
The
Homestead Act of 1862 was
signed by Abraham Lincoln on May 20 and sought to reallocate
unsettled land in the West. The law applied to U.S. citizens and
prospective citizens that had never borne arms against the U.S.
government. It required a five-year commitment, during which time
the homesteader had to build a twelve-by-fourteen foot dwelling,
develop the 160-acre plot of land allocated, and generally better
the condition of the unsettled property. After five years of
positively contributing to the land, the homesteader could file for
the deed to the property, which entailed sending paperwork to the
General Land Office in Washington, D.C., and from there, "valid
claims were granted patent free and clear".
[4846] Potter, Lee Ann and Wynell Schamel. "The
Homestead Act of 1862."
Social Education 61, 6 (October
1997): 359-364. Moreover, there were loopholes to this law,
including provisions made for those serving in the U.S. military.
After the Civil War, Union veterans could deduct time served in the
army from the five-year homesteader requirement.
In common law, through the legally recognized concept of
adverse possession, a squatter can become
a
bona fide owner of property without
compensation to the owner.
Adverse
possession is the process by which one acquires the title to a
piece of land by occupying it for the number of years necessary,
dictated differently by each state. A necessary component of this
transfer of ownership requires that the landowner is aware of the
land occupation and does nothing to put an end to it. If the land
use by the new occupant goes unchecked for the said number of
years, the new occupant can claim legal rights to the title of the
land. The occupant must show that the "possession is actual, open,
notorious, exclusive, hostile, under cover of claim or right, and
continuous and uninterrupted for the statutory period."As Erin
Wiegand notes, the most difficult part of claiming adverse
possession on the part of squatters is the continuous part.
Squatting is a very transient lifestyle and many are evicted on a
frequent basis. In an article regarding recent foreclosures in the
United States, a current squatter in Miami stated of her housing,
"It's a beautiful castle and it's temporary for me, if I can be
here twenty-four hours, I'm thankful." Thus, while adverse
possession allows for the legality of a squatter's situation, it is
not easy to win a case of adverse possession.
Types of Squats
Squats used for living in can be divided into two types (although
they are not absolutes): so-called "back-window squats" (the most
common type , in which occupants sneak in and out of the building
with the intent of hiding that they live there) and "front-door
squats" (where the occupants make little or no effort to conceal
their comings and goings). Many squats may start out as one or the
other and then change over time. Frequently, squatters will move in
and then later assess how open they can be about their activities
before they approach the neighbors; others will not move into a
place until they have first met and discussed the idea with the
neighbors. The difference between the two types can be signs of
vast differences in philosophies of squatting and its purpose, how
long the occupants plan to be around, and on the atmosphere of the
neighborhood, among many other factors.
Squatters can be young people living in
punk
houses or low-income or homeless people.
Non-profit Advocacy
There are non-profit advocacy groups in existence in many cities
throughout the U.S. These groups give organizational backing and
political power to the plight of squatters. The nonprofits also
assist the squatters to have the work on improving their apartments
legitimized, or approved by the appropriate local authority.In New
York City, the
Urban
Homesteading Assistance Board was at the forefront of a
homesteading movement in the 1970s and 1980s, and more recently
liaised with the city to legitimize the efforts of squatters in 11
buildings in the Lower East Side. Although the New York City
government had previously forcibly removed many squatters in the
1990s, in 2002 it agreed to sell these 11 buildings for $1 each to
UHAB. The buildings were to be brought up to code by the squatters
(with UHAB's assistance) and then the apartments were bought for
$250 each and the buildings converted to affordable cooperatives by
the former squatters .
Take Back the Land is a
Miami-based self-proclaimed housing liberation group that formed in
2006. They break into vacant, unused bank-owned foreclosed homes
and move homeless people inside.
Take
Back the Land organized a shantytown called the Umoja Village
to squat a vacant lot in 2006 and 2007.
A group called
Homes Not Jails
advocates squatting houses to end the problem of homelessness. It
has opened "about 500 houses, 95% of which have lasted six months
or less. In a few cases, [these] squats have lasted for two, three
or even six years."
In Minnesota, a group known as the Poor People's Economic Human
Rights Campaign has relocated families into thirteen empty
properties, and one national organizer likened the advocacy and
service work of her group to "a modern-day underground railroad".
The Movement
In addition to these advocacy groups, there are a number of useful
websites that provide squatters with information on how to go about
setting up a squat.
Squat!net is an internationally contributed-to website that
provides squatters with tips on how to squat and possible open
properties on which to do it.
Additionally, some squatters use the internet as a safe space in
which to share information. An Australian-based community of
squatters, SquatSpace, developed a comprehensive website after
being forced underground with the eviction of the Broadway Squats
in South Sydney. The website features anonymous postings of
squatter art exhibits and protests in the Sydney area and provides
a virtual space for those without a physical community space. There
are also numerous squatter blogs and blogs about how to squat,
including one from author
Robert
Neuwirth.
California Gold Rush
When gold was discovered in
California in January 1848, it resulted
in a flood of treasure seekers entering the state, just two weeks
after it was ceded to the United States from Mexico. Due to the
ambiguity in existing law regarding squatting federal land,
individual mining camps had to develop squatting laws to fill the
legal void.
New York City
In
New York
City
, homeless people
squatting in underground spaces such as Freedom Tunnel have come to be known as
Mole People. They were the
subject of an award-winning documentary called
Dark Days.
It is
estimated that in the 1990s, there were between 500 and 1,000
squatters occupying 32 buildings on Manhattan's Lower East
Side
. The buildings had been abandoned as a
result of speculation by owners or police raids as part of a
crackdown on drug use. As the area became gentrified, the squats
were evicted,
Dos Blockos being one.
Three buildings on 13th Street were evicted without notification
following a prolonged legal battle in which the squatters argued
through their lawyer Stanley Cohen that they were entitled to
ownership of the buildings through
adverse possession since they had lived
there since 1983.
In 1995, a preliminary injunction had been granted against the
eviction plans, but this was overturned by state appellate.
Despite squatting being illegal, artists had begun to squat
buildings to live in and use as
atelier
space . European squatters coming to New York brought ideas of
cooperative living with them such as a bar, support between squats,
and tool exchange.
In 2002, eleven squats out of the twelve remaining on the Lower
East Side signed a deal with the city council brokered by the
Urban Homesteading
Assistance Board. In this project, UHAB bought the buildings
for $1 each and agreed to assist the squatters to undertake
essential renovation work, after which their apartments could be
bought for $250 each. UHAB would also train them in running
low-income limited-equity housing cooperatives. After prices peaked
from the housing boom, several of the squatters told press that
they wanted out of the contract so they could be allowed to sell
their units at market rate prices. No such arrangements have been
made, but some squatters are challenging the contract and believe
adverse possession protects their
ownership claim.
The first squat to completed co-op conversion in May of 2009 is
Bullet
Space, an artists' gallery and residence at 292 E. 3rd
St.
Another is C-Squat;
as well as social center ABC No Rio
, which was founded in 1980.
South America
Around many
South American cities
there are
shanty towns. Sometimes, the
authorities tear the houses down, but often, the squatters simply
rebuild again. The houses are built out of whatever material can be
scavenged from the local area or bought cheaply. As time goes by,
the squatters start to form communities and become more
established. The houses are rebuilt piece by piece with more
durable materials. In some cases, a deal is reached with the
authorities and connections for sewage, drinking water, cable
television and electricity are made.
In
Peru
, the name given to the squatter settlements is
pueblos
jóvenes. In Venezuela
, they are called barrios or invasiones (as in "invading
a property", as it can be related to a building or an empty lot),
in Argentina
, the term used is villa miseria, and in Uruguay
, cantegriles.
Brazil

A favela in Rio de Janeiro
In
Brazil
, these squatter communities are called favelas, and a famous example is Rocinha
in Rio de
Janeiro
, estimated to be home of 100,000 people.
Favelas are home to the extremely poor of Brazil and usually lack
much infrastructure and public services, but in some cases, already
have reached the structure needed for a city. They are equivalent
to slums or shanty towns. There are 25 million people living in
favelas all over Brazil.
In
São
Paulo
, the largest favela is Heliópolis
, and there is also a 22-story squatted highrise
building called Prestes
Maia.
There are also rural squatter movements, such as the
Landless Workers' Movement, which
has an estimated 1.5 million members.
Social centers
In Europe, it is common for buildings to be squatted to be used as
social centres. Cafés, bars,
libraries, free shops, swaps shops and gyms have all been created,
with many squats also holding
parties and
concerts. Social centers are often a combination of many things
that happen in one space with the aim of creating a space for
people to meet in a non-commercial setting, whether it be for a
party, political workshop, to see a film, have a drink or have
breakfast. There are many squatted social centers around the world,
but they exist mainly in countries where squatting is legal.
Examples
include Ernst-Kirchweger-Haus
in Austria, the RampART Social Centre
in England, OT301 in the
Netherlands and Ungdomshuset
in Denmark
(evicted on March 1, 2007 and demolished four days
later).
Notable and well known squats
Austria
Brazil
Canada
Croatia
Czech
Republic
Denmark
Finland
Germany
Greece
Italy
Lithuania
Mozambique
Netherlands
- ASCII,
Amsterdam

- OT301, Amsterdam
- Ruigoord, still exists, but no longer a
squat (legalized), Amsterdam
- Huize Spoorloos, Emmen
- HCZ, Eindhoven

- De Blauwe Aanslag
(now evicted), The Hague
- Fort Pannerden
, Pannerden
- Poortgebouw
, still exists, but no longer a squat, Rotterdam
- Het Slaakhuis, Rotterdam
Norway
Philippines
Poland
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
Switzerland
United
Kingdom
- Eel Pie Island
, London
- RampART Social Centre
, London
- Spike Surplus Scheme
,London, evicted February 2009
- Argyle Street Squat,
Norwich
- St Agnes Place
, London, evicted 2005
- Medina House
, Hove
, evicted
September 2006, re-occupied briefly in January 2007
United
States
Well-known squatters
- Black Donnellys, James Donnelly
squatted on the southeastern quarter of Lot 18, Concession 6 (also
known as the Roman Line), Biddulph Township, Canada West .
- Curtis Howe Springer, found
guilty of the charge of squatting on federal land
- Robert Louis Stevenson,
Scottish novelist, poet, essayist and travel writer
- Joe Strummer, the co-founder,
lyricist, rhythm guitarist and lead singer of the English punk rock
band The Clash
- Monckton Synnot, prominent
squatter in Victoria, Australia
- Stza, fronted several skacore bands in the
New York City area, the best known being Choking Victim and
Leftöver Crack
- Sid Vicious, English musician best
known as the former bassist of the influential punk rock group Sex
Pistols
- Gerrard Winstanley, English
Protestant religious reformer and political activist during the
Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell
- S'bu Zikode, elected head of the
South African shackdwellers' movement Abahlali baseMjondolo
- Richard Stallman, American
software freedom activist, hacker, and software developer, called
himself a squatter on campus.
Urban Homesteading
Urban homesteading is a form of self-help housing where abandoned
private properties in urban areas are taken over by the building’s
usually poor residents.
Sometimes this takes the form of squatting, which is not legal
under many jurisdictions. Urban homesteading - in which residents
rehabilitate the apartments through their own labor - may depart
from squatting in some ways, especially philosophically.
While both groups may work initially with no permits, architectural
plans or help from the government, self-help housing aims to manage
the buildings cooperatively, and residents may work collaboratively
with a non-profit organization or city government to legally obtain
ownership of the building.
In some cases, urban homesteading is an organic phenomenon that
evolves as a grassroots strategy of residents for dealing with a
lack of affordable housing, or a sizable existence of abandoned,
depressed, neglected or foreclosed housing stock. Some cities have
used it as a solution to creating affordable housing.
See also
References
- Chris Roberts, Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind
Rhyme, Thorndike Press,2006 (ISBN 0-7862-8517-6)
- Neuwirth, R (2004) Shadow Cities: A Billion Squatters, A
New Urban World, Routledge ISBN 0415933196
- Reeve, Kesia "Squatting Since 1945: The enduring relevance of
material need."Pp. 197-216 in Housing and Social Policy
edited by Peter Somerville with Nigel Sprigings. London: Routledge.
ISBN 0415283663
- [1], Peñalver, Eduardo M., "Homesteaders in the Hood,"
Slate Magazine, March 25, 2009.
- Wates, Nick. April 25, 2009.
http://www.nickwates.co.uk/squat.htm
- Ed. Wates and Wolmar (1980) Squatting: The Real Story
(Bay Leaf Books) ISBN 0950725900
- Wates, Nick. April 25, 2009.
http://www.nickwates.co.uk/squat.htm
- Living amidst the rubbish of Kenya's slum
- Informal settlements in South Africa
- Western Cape Housing Crisis: Writings on Joe Slovo and Delft
[2]
- Pages 110-114 Neuwirth, R (2004) Shadow Cities: A Billion
Squatters, A New Urban World, Routledge ISBN 0415933196
- SquatSpace History - Broadway Squats
- SquatSpace History - Midnight Star
- /06/1065292527665.html?from=storyrhs Bryor, Lisa Home
for Sydney squatters with fire in its belly in the Sydney
Morning Herald October 7, 2003
- Creagh, Sunanda Squatters out as bulldozer
start engines in the Sydney Morning Herald May 5,
2008
- http://www.squatspace.com/squatfest/
- Mayer M The Career of Urban Social Movements in West
Germany in eds Fisher R and Kling J Urban Affairs Annual
Review volume 41 London (1993)
- Pruijt H Squatting in Europe - English version of
Pruijt, H., 2004, Okupar en Europa, in Miguel Martínez
Lopez and Ramón Adell (eds) ¿Dónde están las llaves? El movimiento
okupa: prácticas y contextos sociales, Madrid, La Catarata, 35-60
Available online
- hustaka.org
- Wiegand E. (2004) Trespass at Will: Squatting
as Direct Action, Human Right & Justified Theft (LiP
Magazine)
- Politie hervat ontruiming Fort Pannerden
- Fort Pannerden voorlopig niet ontruimd
- Fort Pannerden blijft voorlopig
- Pruijt H (2003) Is the institutionalization of urban
movements inevitable? A comparison of the opportunities for
sustained squatting in New York City and Amsterdam in
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Vol. 27, nr.
1 Available online
- Kraken wordt strafbaar
- Grote steden tegen verbod op kraken
- Landelijke spandoekenaktie kraakverbod
- The 'success' of Barcelona
- CASA Participants 2005
- nextGENDERation network
- Infousurpa – Butlleti setmanal de contr@informació des del
1996. Nr. 486, 11 to 17 July 2007 (collective, weekly updated
event calendar of 45 occupied houses in Barcelona; hanging out in
occupied houses)
- http://eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaztetxe
- YouTube - Desalojo del gaztetxe Euskal Jai en
Iruña
- Eviction of squatters from SwissInfo
- http://londonsocialcentre.org.uk/
- Anonymous, (12th edition, 2004)Squatter's Handbook,
Advisory Service for Squatters ISBN 0950776955
- Fallon A Squatters are back, and upwardly mobile in
The Independent on Sunday October 12, 2003
- The Section 6 Legal Warning
- Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994
- 'Oldest squat' residents evicted
- [3]
- Law and the Underprivileged, Smith, Chris and Hoath, David C.
1975, Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd, London
- Ed. Wates and Wolmar (1980)Squatting: The Real Story
(Bay Leaf Books) ISBN 0950725900
- Police storm squat in Piccadilly News On This Day September 21, 1969
- Etoe, C Empty again, the squat attacked by bulldozers
Camden New Journal August 21, 2003
- Squatting
- [4] Larson, Aaron.
- Trespass at Will: Squatting as Direct Action, Human Right
and Justified Theft, Wiegand, Erin. 2004
- With Advocates' Help, Squatters Call Foreclosures
Home. Leland, John. The New York Times. April 10, 2009
- Neuwirth R Squatters' Rites in City Limits Magazine
(September/October 2002) Available online
- Lueck T Police Evict Squatters From Three City-Owned
Tenements in the East Village in The New York Times August 14,
1996 Available online
- Ciezadlo A Squatters' Rites: Taking Liberties - A Brief
History of New York City's Squats in City Limits Magazine
Available online
- The
Robert Louis Stevenson Silverado Museum
- Squat 'n' roll hero
- A not so brief history of No Commercial Value,
Chocking Victim, & Leftover Crack (In the words of Stza
himself)
- The Dope on The Sex Pistols
- Gerard Winstanley: 17th Century Communist at
Kingston (Christopher Hill, 1996)
- City: 'Squatters and the cities of tomorrow'
Further reading
- 949 Market (2002) - a zine by a group of people who squatted an abandoned
pool hall in a very public way and created a community center in
San
Francisco
.
$2–3 cash to: Lara, 3288 21st St. PMB #79, San Francisco, CA
94110
- Corr, A. (1999) No Trespassing! Squatting, Rent
Strikes and Land Struggles Worldwide South End Press ISBN
0896085953
- Cracking The Movement (1994) - Amsterdam squatter
history and the movement's relation to the media. Also available
online
- Cracking The System (2008) - A zine about squats and
social centres in Europe inspired by the april2008 initiative. Also
available online
- Katsiaficas, G. (1999) The Subversion of Politics: European
Autonomous Social Movements and the Decolonization of Everyday
Life Humanity Books ISBN 1573924415 Also available online
- Survival Without Rent (1986) - A how to squat
guide from NYC originally printed in 1986
- Squat The World (1995) - A story of 1995 squat
evictions in New York City
- The ELF Squat Experiment - An experiment in
squatting large buildings.
- Waterhouse, Richard (2005). The Vision Splendid: A Social
and Cultural History of Rural Australia, Fremantle, Curtin
University Books
- War In The Neighborhood – a
Graphic Novel about squatting on New York City
's Lower
East Side
in the 1980s by World War 3 Illustrated artist and
editor Seth Tobocman published by
Autonomedia
- What's this place? (2008) - A booklet with stories
from radical social centres in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Also
available online
- Squatters in £30m mansion in Park Lane,
London
External links