Squatting in Peru
Early history
Squatting in Peru follows the trajectory of other Latin American cities, in that factors such as internal migration to urban areas, lack of affordable housing and ineffective governance have resulted in large informal settlements. Peruvian law states that squatters on both public and private land cannot be evicted if they have stayed there for over 24 hours. Instead, they can apply for legal title at court and if the land has not been developed over the previous decade, they can expect to win the case.From the 1940s onwards, groups of families made land invasions to acquire homes and were often evicted forcibly, until government policy gradually changed to toleration. Many haciendas were squatted in the 1950s by mestizo peasants and most occupations were tolerated. These mostly squatted settlements known as barriadas made up 4 per cent of new homes in 1940 and nearly 70 per cent in 1985. The rapid growth of the capital Lima is shown by estimates of the squatter population being 5,000 in 1942, 130,000 in 1958, 338,000 in 1962 and 500,000 in 1966. By the 2000s, the shanty towns were known as pueblos jóvenes and housed an estimated 35 per cent of the population of Lima. Most pueblos jóvenes are however assisted by the city authorities which try to provide infrastructure; others arise spontaneously as squats and a smaller proportion are built on land bought by cooperatives. By 1998, almost 2.5 million inhabitants of Lima lived in pueblos jóvenes, out of a total population of over 6.8 million. The term tugurio refers to the separate phenomenon of urban slum tenements, although residents prefer the official term solares. Around 25 per cent of Lima's population lives in these dilapidated tenement blocks.
From the 1980s onwards, a wall was built in Lima to separate rich settlements such as La Molina and Santiago de Surco from pueblos jóvenes such as San Juan de Miraflores and Villa María del Triunfo. It became known as the "Wall of Shame" and by 2019 was long. The wall means that people who work service jobs in affluent areas must commute for several hours to work. The informal settlement Villa El Salvador was squatted in 1971 and quickly grew to have a population of 25,000. By 2008, its population was 350,000 and many squatters had title to their land, although all expansion of the site continues to be illegal. The United Front of the Peoples of Peru represents inhabitants of informal settlements and has its headquarters at Villa El Salvador.