Territorial stigmatization in socially-mixed neighborhoods: A comparison of global-north and global-south problems
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Date
2017
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Publisher
Emerald Books
Abstract
Purpose: In this chapter, I focus on stigmatization exercised and experienced by local residents, comparing two socially-diverse areas in very different contexts: the Cabrini Green-Near North area in Chicago and the La Loma-La Florida area in Santiago de Chile. Methodology/approach: Data for this study were drawn from 1 year of qualitative research, using interviews with residents and institutional actors, field notes from observation sessions of several inter-group spaces, and “spatial inventories” in which I located the traces of the symbolic presence of each group. Findings: Despite contextual differences of type of social differentiation, type of social mix, type of housing tenure for the poor, and public visibility, I argue that there are important common problems: first, symbolic differences are stressed by identity changes; second, distrust against “the other” is spatially crystallized in any type and scale of social housing; third, stigmatization changes in form and scale; and fourth, there are persisting prejudiced depictions and patterns of avoidance. Social implications: Socially-mixed neighborhoods, as areas where at least two different social groups live in proximity, offer an interesting context for observing territorial stigmatization. They are strange creatures of urban development, due to the powerful symbolism of desegregation in contexts of growing inequalities. Originality/value: The chapter contributes to a cross-national perspective with a comparison of global-north and global-south cities. And it also springs from a study of socially-mixed areas, in which the debate on concentrated/deconcentrated poverty is central, and in which the problem of “clearing places” appears in both material (e.g., displacement) and symbolic (e.g., stigmatization) terms.
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Keywords
Territorial stigmatization, Socially mixed neighborhoods, Social housing, Urban renewal, Global north, Global south
Citation
Ruiz-Tagle, Javier. Territorial stigmatization in socially-mixed neighborhoods: A comparison of global-north and global-south problems. In: Paul Watt y Peer Smets,editors. Social Housing and Urban Renewal: A Cross-National Perspective. Bingley, Reino Unido: Emerald Books; 2017. p. 417-470.
