São Paulo in the Twenty-First Century

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Average Income
Belo Horizonte
Brazilian Metropolitan Regions
Category=JBSL
Cidade Tiradentes
Counterfactual Decomposition
cruzes
das
Demographic Census
demographic transitions
Dissimilarity Index
EGP Class
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Favela Population
High Level Professionals
housing policy analysis
IBGE
Location Quotient
Low Level Professionals
manual
Marta Suplicy
metropolis
metropolitan
metropolitan segregation
mogi
Mogi Das Cruzes
municipality
Nonmanual Workers
Paulo Maluf
Paulo Metropolis
Paulo Metropolitan Region
Paulo Municipality
Paulo's Favelas
Private Sector Developments
Private Sector Housing Developments
region
socioeconomic stratification
spaces
spatial justice
UK Social Exclusion Unit
urban inequality research
urban sociology
Urbanized Favelas
worker

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367596569
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book analyzes in detail the main social, economic and special transformation of the city of São Paulo. In the last 30 years, São Paulo has become a more heterogeneous and less unequal city. Contrary to some expectations, the recent economic transformations did not produce social polarization, and the localized processes of spaces production (and the plural is increasingly important) are more and more key to define their respective growth patterns, social conditions, forms of housing production, service availability and urban precariousness. In other dimensions, however, inequalities remain present and strong and certain disadvantaged areas have changed little and are still marked by strong social inequalities. The metropolis remains heavily segregated in terms of race and class, in a clear hierarchical structure.

The book shows that it is necessary to escape from dual and polarity interpretations. This did not lead to the complete disappearance of a crudely radial and concentric structure (not only due to geographic path dependence), but superposes other elements over it, leading to more complexes and continuous patterns. A general summary of these elements could perhaps be stated as pointing to greater social/spatial heterogeneity, accompanied by smaller, but reconfigured inequalities.

Eduardo Cesar Leão Marques is a Livre-docente professor at the Department of Political Science at USP and researcher at the Center for Metropolitan Studies.