Gender and territorial inequalities.: Notes from the northeast periphery of Montevideo.
The peripheries of Latin American cities, emerged in the last century and partly consolidated in the present, have distinctive features that make them territorial pieces worthy of differential studies that challenge the methodologies and practices of planning and urbanism. The extreme territorial, s...
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| Formato: | Artículo revista |
| Lenguaje: | Español |
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Instituto de Investigación de Vivienda y Hábitat
2021
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| Acceso en línea: | https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ReViyCi/article/view/34686 |
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| Sumario: | The peripheries of Latin American cities, emerged in the last century and partly consolidated in the present, have distinctive features that make them territorial pieces worthy of differential studies that challenge the methodologies and practices of planning and urbanism.
The extreme territorial, social and environmental complexity of these areas has been approached from various disciplines and fields, however, the necessary and pertinent incorporation of the gender perspective in territorial studies and its methodological specificities are little explored issues for the Uruguayan case.
The territory of the northeast periphery of Montevideo that will be analyzed in this writing shows a dispersed and segmented structure that has a differential impact, according to sex, on the temporality of the chain of daily tasks of people. The increase in female-headed households and a greater ratio of dependents, the remoteness of workplaces and the deficient public transport system, in a context of scarcity of equipment and infrastructures for care, associated with patterns and modes of mobility Differentiated by sex, they accentuate the conditions of gender inequality in this territory of the periphery. |
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