Tendencias sociodemográficas y segregación socioespacial en Los Ángeles, Chile

Authors

  • Gerardo Azócar Universidad de Concepción (Chile)
  • Cristián Henríquez Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Claudia Valenzuela Universidad de Concepción (Chile)
  • Hugo Romero Universidad de Chile

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-34022008000300006

Keywords:

Sociospatial segregation, sociodemografics factors, mid-cities, Santa María de Los Ángeles

Abstract

In this paper the behavior of socio-demographic variables in urban and rural zones of Los Ángeles city is analyzed, Biobío region, Chile. The main demographic and social processes are identified in relationship with the fast urban growth of the city, the land use patterns and the socio-spatial segregation processes. A relation between demographic variables and social spaces were defined, mainly in the urban fringe. The importance of empirical studies is recognized in the mid cities which in the last decades have been impact by the economic globalization process and the public policies, mainly in the matter of social house and road infrastructure, recognizing those specific factors and those of nature more general than they have guided its recent urban change. It is assumed, like one of the main hypotheses, that certain demographic and social configurations show a clearly spatial pattern in the city, like the concentration of the poverty and the social vulnerability in some urban areas

Author Biographies

Gerardo Azócar, Universidad de Concepción (Chile)

Centro de Ciencias Ambientales EULA-Chile

Cristián Henríquez, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

Instituto de Geografía

Claudia Valenzuela, Universidad de Concepción (Chile)

Escuela de Sociología

Hugo Romero, Universidad de Chile

Departamento de Geografía

How to Cite

Azócar, G. ., Henríquez, C. ., Valenzuela, C. ., & Romero, H. . (2021). Tendencias sociodemográficas y segregación socioespacial en Los Ángeles, Chile. Revista De Geografía Norte Grande, (41), 103–128. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-34022008000300006

Issue

Section

Artículos