Madrid: Urban regeneration projects and social mobilization

被引:47
|
作者
Diaz Orueta, Fernando [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alicante, Dept Sociol 2, E-03080 Alicante, Spain
关键词
urban regeneration; segregation; social mobilization; social change;
D O I
10.1016/j.cities.2006.11.004
中图分类号
TU98 [区域规划、城乡规划];
学科分类号
0814 ; 082803 ; 0833 ;
摘要
Madrid is undergoing powerful urban changes. As in other big cities, the economic and territorial restructuring also means deep social changes. Madrid's socio-spatial configuration is becoming more segregated, with the recent evolution of the real estate industry one of the key issues of the process. In this context, different social groups have understood some of the urban projects implemented by the local and regional administrations as posing a danger to urban projects implemented by the local and regional administrations as posing a danger to urban segregation in the city. The article analyses social mobilization in a central neighborhood where an ambitious urban regeneration project is being developed. Since 1997, a social mobilization is in progress against a plan that could mean the first step of a gentrification process. A very diverse set of social groups (immigrants associations, squatters, ONG, cultural associations, etc.) joined to create the Red de Colectivos de Lavapies [add diacritical] (Lavapies, Groups Network). Over the last few years the evolution of the mobilization has favored a process of convergence with other social organizations and, finally, they have developed a critique of the overall transformation of Madrid, seen as excessively oriented towards middle class consumption and the city's tourist industry. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:183 / 193
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Emerging Social Practices in Urban Space: The Case of Madrid Introduction
    Monge, Fernando
    URBANITIES-JOURNAL OF URBAN ETHNOGRAPHY, 2016, 6 (01): : 3 - 7
  • [32] Gender mainstreaming in urban projects: A measurement proposal applied to Spanish Urban regeneration policies
    Donati, Francesca
    Rodriguez-Garcia, Maria Jesus
    CITIES, 2024, 150
  • [33] Urban Social Movements and the Right to the City: An Introduction to the Special Issue on Urban Mobilization
    Domaradzka, Anna
    VOLUNTAS, 2018, 29 (04): : 607 - 620
  • [34] Urban Social Movements and the Right to the City: An Introduction to the Special Issue on Urban Mobilization
    Anna Domaradzka
    VOLUNTAS: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations, 2018, 29 : 607 - 620
  • [35] Social policy in an Urban initiative: Urban projects in Tenerife (Canary Islands)
    Diaz Rodriguez, Ma del Carmen
    Delgado Acosta, Ma Carmen Rosa
    DOCUMENTS D ANALISI GEOGRAFICA, 2008, 52 : 69 - 90
  • [36] Urban Regeneration and Social Sustainability of Indore City
    Mishra, Soma Anil
    Pandit, R. K.
    Saxena, Mayank
    UNDERSTANDING BUILT ENVIRONMENT, 2017, : 109 - 124
  • [37] URBAN REGENERATION IN ROTTERDAM: ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL VALUES
    Mak, Arienne
    Stouten, Paul
    EUROPEAN SPATIAL RESEARCH AND POLICY, 2014, 21 (01) : 101 - 122
  • [38] Adaptive utilitarianism, social enterprises and urban regeneration
    Murtagh, Brendan
    McFerran, Kathryn
    ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING C-GOVERNMENT AND POLICY, 2015, 33 (06): : 1585 - 1599
  • [39] Assessing social impacts in urban waterfront regeneration
    Sairinen, R
    Kumpulainen, S
    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REVIEW, 2006, 26 (01) : 120 - 135
  • [40] Social exclusion, urban regeneration and economic reintegration
    McGregor, A
    McConnachie, M
    URBAN STUDIES, 1995, 32 (10) : 1587 - 1600