*Mobile Housing as an Initial Proposal to Manage Informal Territories Exposed to Disaster Risks DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.108828*

has decided to leave informal settlements and relocate to social housing complexes, people would encounter hostile urban environments, usually marked by violence, leading them to question how owning these houses would grant them the dignity and adequate living conditions assured by the government and its authorities [28, 29]. The peripheral location of the land available to build social housing has registered important consequences in the displaced groups, including lack of connectivity and transportation to access workplaces, education, and health establishments, in addition to the loss of support networks, leading in many cases to people wanting to return to informal settlements [29]. This allows us to reflect on how individual residential trajectories are conceived by the state, and if access to the property would be the last stage of it. Finally, we do not mention subleased dwellings in central spaces, since there is a lack of programs for their inhabitants. A preliminary hypothesis would explain that the occurrence of housing violations within the urban limits and behind formal housing facades, would make it difficult to identify this situation and with that, to develop public policies to solve it.
