| Literature DB >> 12268464 |
Abstract
"In this paper, we review those major trends characteristic of peripheral urbanization as they are reflected in the recent Latin American experience. Such trends include: urban primacy and the relative absence of secondary city systems, the character and dynamics of the informal sector, housing deficiencies and state housing policy, and the recent rise of popular organizations oriented toward self-sufficiency or militant demand-making. These trends are important because they represent the form in which continuity and change of peripheral class structures are reflected in space, both at the national and local levels....[The authors conclude that] the political economy of Latin American cities is one where the resolution to the plight of underdevelopment promised by accelerated capitalist industrialization has not materialized. Instead, the process has produced a more complex and more contradictory social fabric." excerptEntities:
Keywords: Americas; Capitalism; Communication; Critique; Developed Countries; Developing Countries; Development Planning; Development Policy; Economic Conditions; Economic Development; Economic Factors; Geographic Factors; Housing; Industrialization; Influentials; Interest Groups; Knowledge Sources; Latin America; Macroeconomic Factors; Policy; Political Factors; Political Systems; Population; Residence Characteristics; Social Development; Spatial Distribution; Urban Spatial Distribution; Urbanization
Mesh:
Year: 1986 PMID: 12268464 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9663.1986.tb01722.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tijdschr Econ Soc Geogr ISSN: 0040-747X