scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

Laura Rodríguez

Bio: Laura Rodríguez is an academic researcher. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 121 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2013

154 citations


Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a rhetorical analysis of newspaper reports and interview accounts about the development of a contested public space in Barcelona, known locally both as Figuera's Well and the Hole of Shame, is presented, whose implications are discussed both within the context of local power struggles and within the wider ideological struggles over the nature of public spaces in Barcelona.

72 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors suggest that the impact of tourism and transnational gentrification on socio-spatial justice in cities should be taken into account, and they suggest that travel flows across the planet have drawn attention to socio spatial justice.
Abstract: Increasing international travel flows across the planet have drawn attention to socio-spatial justice concerning the impact of tourism and transnational gentrification in cities. We suggest that th...

62 citations

01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, a marco teorico holistico is proposed to comprender the complejas variables that vertebran the procesos de desconcentracion urbana, and a traves of un estudio de caso centrado in el sistema territorial espanol, cuestionar las visiones historicistas and unidireccionales del cambio urbano.
Abstract: El estudio de las relaciones centrifugas entre la ciudad y sus espacios circundantes ha ocupado tradicionalmente un lugar muy destacado en los escenarios teoricos y empiricos de la sociologia urbana y rural Tales relaciones, o procesos de desconcentracion urbana, estan generando una ingente cantidad de preguntas dificiles de responder: ?que tipos de periferias existen en los tramados metropolitanos actuales?, ?como han evolucionado en los ultimos anos los suburbios de las megaciudades?, ?que elementos caracterizan a los habitats exurbanos transcontinentales?, ?hasta que punto los fenomenos contraurbanos han alterado las interacciones campo,ciudad durante las pasadas decadas? Este libro trata de proponer, mediante un analisis historico,comparativo que comienza en la Antiguedad, un marco teorico holistico que nos ayude a comprender las complejas variables estructurales y superestructurales que vertebran los procesos de desconcentracion urbana Tambien pretende, a traves de un estudio de caso centrado en el sistema territorial espanol, cuestionar las visiones historicistas y unidireccionales del cambio urbano

52 citations

BookDOI
01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: In this paper, the development of squatting practices and movements in nine European cities (Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, Rome, Paris, Berlin, Copenhagen, Rotterdam, and Brighton) by exam results is studied.
Abstract: This volume sheds light on the development of squatting practices and movements in nine European cities (Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, Rome, Paris, Berlin, Copenhagen, Rotterdam and Brighton) by exam ...

37 citations

Dissertation
22 May 2019
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that a strong engagement with the critical literature in urban studies is required while understanding the complex and evolving historical-geographies of Rio de Janeiro's favelas and Johannesburg's townships through qualitative methodologies, and without neglecting a historical-comparative orientation.
Abstract: My general objective with this thesis is to contribute to the search for connections between postcolonial and critical understandings in urban studies. Building on my analysis of the urban trajectories of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships, I argue for bringing the grammars of critical thought and postcolonial thought in urban studies closer together. The historical-geographies of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships show that critical theorization of urbanization must be somewhat pluralized and decentered. I also argue that such an agenda of research should be developed in the form of a critique of capitalist (urban) development. Therefore, in this study, I aim at contributing to the critical understanding of (urban) development by emphasizing how processes of (de)commodification and socio-spatial segregation have been taking place in these two contexts of urban marginalization. Concerning the temporal scope of the study, I put the emphasis on recent dynamics of social change in Brazil and South Africa that might have had consequences for the historically marginalized urban spaces of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships. Consequently, despite my attentiveness to the history of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships, I place the weight of the analysis on the period that starts somewhere between the 1990s and 2000s and goes on into the 2010s. As a comparative, historically attentive, multi-sited study, my research demanded a resourceful organization and combination of several methodological elements. In order to organize a comparative study of the urban trajectories of favelas and townships, I rely on a methodology that combines both secondary and primary sources. I draw upon the pertinent literatures about each of the two cities in order to delve into the histories of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships. On the other hand, this study depends largely on qualitative research methods, particularly on qualitative data I gathered during my fieldwork in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships. The data coming from my fieldwork in Rio de Janeiro in 2014 and in Johannesburg in 2013 and in 2015 comprises in-depth interviews, field notes, and photos from the areas I lived in and visited. While approaching Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships through qualitative methodologies, and without neglecting a historical-comparative orientation, I show that we have a more complex picture that hardly fits into the general representation of them as static, indistinguishable, dreadful worlds. I also maintain that critique – which in our case might be also understood as a critique of (urban) development – must not be sidestepped. I argue that a strong engagement with the critical literature in urban studies is required while understanding the complex and evolving historical-geographies of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas and Johannesburg’s townships. We must take the unevenness of capitalist development and other debates around key issues like the production of space, accumulation by dispossession, and (de)commodification into account if we are to understand our urbanizing present.

29 citations