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Operation Move-In was a housing and squatter rights movement of the 1970s. The movement consisted of various anti-poverty and community organizations in New York City, including Metropolitan Council on Housing. It was an early example of New York City squatter activism, which strengthened in the 1980s, and helped publicize tenant rights. The squatter rights movement helped launch El Comité, a Puerto Rican left-wing organization. Some spaces claimed by Operation Move-In activists were transformed into low-income cooperatives in the 1980s, enacted through the Tenant Interim Lease Program.

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  • Movimiento Operation Move-In (es)
  • Operation Move-In (en)
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  • El movimiento Operation Move-In fue un movimiento pro derechos de la vivienda y ocupaciones ilegales de la década de los 70.​ El movimiento consistió en varias organizaciones comunitarias y de lucha contra la pobreza en la ciudad de Nueva York, ​ incluida la organización Consejo Metropolitano de Vivienda. ​ Fue un ejemplo temprano del activismo okupa de la ciudad de Nueva York, que se fortaleció en la década de los 80 y ayudó a la sociedad a tomar conciencia sobre los derechos de los inquilinos. ​ (es)
  • Operation Move-In was a housing and squatter rights movement of the 1970s. The movement consisted of various anti-poverty and community organizations in New York City, including Metropolitan Council on Housing. It was an early example of New York City squatter activism, which strengthened in the 1980s, and helped publicize tenant rights. The squatter rights movement helped launch El Comité, a Puerto Rican left-wing organization. Some spaces claimed by Operation Move-In activists were transformed into low-income cooperatives in the 1980s, enacted through the Tenant Interim Lease Program. (en)
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  • El movimiento Operation Move-In fue un movimiento pro derechos de la vivienda y ocupaciones ilegales de la década de los 70.​ El movimiento consistió en varias organizaciones comunitarias y de lucha contra la pobreza en la ciudad de Nueva York, ​ incluida la organización Consejo Metropolitano de Vivienda. ​ Fue un ejemplo temprano del activismo okupa de la ciudad de Nueva York, que se fortaleció en la década de los 80 y ayudó a la sociedad a tomar conciencia sobre los derechos de los inquilinos. ​ El movimiento consistió principalmente en activistas afroamericanos y latinos ​ que se oponían al desalojo de la clase trabajadora y de los inquilinos pobres de sus hogares. Estos desalojos se estaban produciendo debido al proceso de gentrificación que se estaba dando en el barrio de Manhattan.​ En respuesta, el movimiento organizó una toma coordinada de nueve edificios vacíos en el verano de 1970. Los edificios estaban programados para su demolición y estaban ubicados en las calles Novena Avenida (Columbus Avenue) y West 80th Street. A esto siguió la toma coordinada de los edificios en Morningside Heights, que se habían reservado para el desarrollo privado. Los activistas afirmaron que tenían derecho a ocupar las propiedades y que podían identificar mejor cómo usar los espacios que las entidades gubernamentales o comerciales.​ También exigieron que se designaran más pisos para residentes de bajos ingresos los edificios nuevos de gran altura . El movimiento por los derechos de los okupas impulsó otras organizaciones de izquierdas pro derechos de los migrantes como la llamada El comité-MINP. ​ Algunos de los espacios reclamados por los activistas de Operation Move-In se transformaron en cooperativas de personas con bajos ingresos en la década de los 80, promulgadas a través del programa público Tenant Interim Lease Program (Programa de Arrendamiento Interino para Inquilinos).​ (es)
  • Operation Move-In was a housing and squatter rights movement of the 1970s. The movement consisted of various anti-poverty and community organizations in New York City, including Metropolitan Council on Housing. It was an early example of New York City squatter activism, which strengthened in the 1980s, and helped publicize tenant rights. The movement primarily consisted of African-American and Latino activists, who were opposed to the eviction of working-class and poor tenants from their homes. These removals were rooted in efforts to gentrify neighborhoods, in a collaborative effort between city agencies, real estate developers, and banks. In response, the movement organized a coordinated take-over of nine vacant buildings in the summer of 1970. The buildings were slated for demolition, and they were located in Ninth Avenue (Columbus Avenue) and West 80th Street in Manhattan. This was followed by the coordinated take-over of buildings in Morningside Heights, which had been reserved for private development. The activists claimed that they had the right to squat in the properties, and that they could better identify how to use the spaces than government or business entities. They also demanded that new, high-rise buildings designate more units to low-income residents. The squatter rights movement helped launch El Comité, a Puerto Rican left-wing organization. Some spaces claimed by Operation Move-In activists were transformed into low-income cooperatives in the 1980s, enacted through the Tenant Interim Lease Program. (en)
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