Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 23 segundos...
Inicio  /  Urban Science  /  Vol: 2 Núm: 3 Par: Septemb (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Urban Segregation and Socio-Spatial Interactions: A Configurational Approach

Ana Luisa Maffini and Clarice Maraschin    

Resumen

Urban segregation is an inherent feature of cities and becomes a problem when excluding or hindering certain groups from accessing services, activities and spaces. In Brazil, segregation by social class is dominant in the structure of cities and public policies rarely address urban configuration as part of the segregation problem. This work addresses segregation with a shift in emphasis from traditional housing segregation to segregation as the restraint of socio-spatial interactions, thus including other facets of the phenomenon that have not yet been properly explored and seeking new spatially relevant metrics. This paper aims to present a methodology of segregation analysis based on configurational models and develop an empirical application in a Brazilian city. Representing the probabilities of interaction between different socio-economic groups in public spaces, a configurational model was used, addressing retail-residence spatial relationship. The attributes of population size, household income and number of retail establishments were considered. The results allowed identifying the probabilistic residence-retail trajectories for high and low income groups, providing a first measure of spatial segregation. The conclusions seek to highlight the importance of configurational approaches for segregation studies, as well as to show potentialities and limits of this methodology.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Robert William Pendergrass    
Racial diversity was found to be related to racial residential segregation and strongly related to racial isolation within the nation?s metropolitan and micropolitan areas at the block group level. However, the relationships were both complex and depende... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Joan Checa and Oriol Nel·lo    
Spatial inequalities in living conditions have traditionally been attributed to geographical location, the opposition between urban and rural settings or the size of settlements. Accordingly, the geographical literature has used these oppositions to expl... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Osama Hidayat and Yoshitaka Kajita    
During Afghanistan?s rapid urban growth, development diversified from state-run initiatives to ones led by local municipalities or nongovernmental entities such as private enterprises. Owing to these various efforts, cities face environmental challenges,... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Laleh Derakhti and Guy Baeten    
Transit-oriented development (TOD) has become a leading model of urban planning worldwide that promises to meet a broad range of local and regional objectives: improving mobility, expanding ridership, attracting investment, reducing urban poverty, improv... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Francisco Cebrián-Abellán, María José Piñeira-Mantiñán and Jesús M. González-Pérez    
The 2008 crisis entailed a turning point in the process of creating and managing cities and territories. There has been a change from a city model, based on expansive growth, which was also speculative and deregulated, had provoked an unprecedented expan... ver más
Revista: Urban Science