Abstract
The article discusses the political effects of the National Union for Popular Housing (UNMP, in Portuguese) on public policy. For this analysis, we mobilize the Anglo-Saxon literature that has been devoted to the study the results of social movements, especially the literature on the model of the joint-effect model. The UNMP has impacted the self-managed housing programs through a combination of mobilizations capacity and the presence of institutional allies in positions of power. To understanding how these variables are combined to produce results, we highlight two explanatory factors: projects sharing and multiple membership
KEYWORDS:
result of social movements; self-management; housing policy; public policies; social movements