Giusepe Filocomo

Visiting Scholar

Giusepe Filocomo is a visiting scholar at the Center for Place, Culture, and Politics at the City University of New York and a researcher at the Housing and Human Settlements Laboratory at the University of São Paulo, as well as the Institute of Science and Technology for Housing and City Production in Brazil. His current research focuses on urban housing provision in São Paulo and New York. Through this work, Filocomo engages with urban, sociological, and historical studies, considering both the national context and local specifics to understand the production of urban space. He is also a doctoral candidate at the University of São Paulo, where he conducts research on housing provision, urban development, and housing and urban policies. Additionally, he has served as a specialized consultant for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) in Brazil.


Collected Work


“Urban Housing Provision in Peripheral Capitalism: The Future of the Past in Brazil”

Housing provision has been widely studied in Brazil since the mid-20th century. These studies have been part of a specific field as well as a more general discussion on urbanization and development on the periphery of capitalism, in a country that was able to industrialize without achieving international autonomy. This research contributes to this discussion by demonstrating the broad universe of house production and circulation that is still little understood by studies on Brazilian housing, as well as the relevance of this universe for enriching an analytical model on housing provision. In order to do this, I evaluate interpretations of housing in Brazil in consonance with the structure of housing finance, to verify that the sources of housing funding shed light on processes and markets that have not been explored much in national literature. The analysis of fiscal resources, through public spending on housing and urban services and infrastructures, support a better understanding of housing and cities in contemporary Brazil. This effort is also relevant because, by analyzing specific forms of housing provision through the production of space, one can explore particularities about the way in which housing is produced and circulated, thus supporting a broader understanding of the functioning of capitalism and some specific modes of capitalist accumulation. Current specific forms of housing provision can be seen in relation to the socio-spatial product of a Brazilian past, which is last century’s industrialization.




Participating Years


2024–2025

Anti-Capitalist Environmentalism

The existential problems of the planet are complex. Given capitalism’s obsessive growth primed by, for instance, land-grabbing, extractivism, social and economic hierarchies, and war, capitalist environmentalism leans heavily on tweaking armageddon to maintain its hold on futurity for the planet.