A segregação étnico-racial nas regiões metropolitanas de São Paulo e Londres: reflexões sobre um estudo comparativo
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.20947/S0102-3098a0262Palavras-chave:
Segregação étnico-racial, Índices espaciais, Estudo comparativo, Londres, São PauloResumo
Este artigo analisa a segregação residencial do ponto de vista étnico-racial em duas grandes regiões metropolitanas localizadas no Sul e Norte Globais: Londres (Reino Unido) e São Paulo (Brasil). Utilizaram-se índices espaciais globais e locais para mapear e mensurar as diferentes dimensões espaciais e escalas da segregação étnico-racial nas duas metrópoles. O estudo adotou uma abordagem relacional para a interpretação dos resultados que justapõe resultados globais e variações locais da segregação, dimensões espaciais complementares (dissimilaridade e exposição/isolamento), múltiplas escalas geográficas e padrões de localização espacial dos diferentes grupos étnico-raciais. Os resultados indicam que as regiões metropolitanas de Londres e São Paulo apresentam padrões espaciais de segregação centro-periferia similares, mas inversos. Os resultados também relevaram que os níveis de segregação de Londres são mais altos do que os de São Paulo, indicando que contraintuitivamente Londres é mais segregada étnico-racialmente do que São Paulo. Esses resultados são discutidos no contexto da literatura, explorando as similaridades e diferenças entre as duas regiões metropolitanas. O artigo conclui com uma discussão sobre a relevância dos resultados e uma reflexão sobre a agenda futura para os estudos sobre a segregação urbana.
Downloads
Referências
BARROS, J.; FEITOSA, F. F. Uneven geographies: exploring the sensitivity of spatial indices of residential segregation. Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science, v. 45, n. 6, p. 1073-1089, 2018.
BONDUKI, N.; ROLNIK, R. Periferia da Grande São Paulo. Reprodução do espaço como expediente de reprodução da força de trabalho. In: MARICATO, E. (Org.). A produção capitalista da casa (e da cidade) no Brasil industrial. 2. ed. São Paulo: Editora Alfa-Omega, 1982. p. 117-154.
BOTERMAN, W. R.; MUSTERD, S.; MANTING, D. Multiple dimensions of residential segregation. The case of the metropolitan area of Amsterdam. Urban Geography, v. 42. n. 4, p. 481-506, 2021.
CALDEIRA, T. P. do R. City of walls: crime, segregation, and citizenship in São Paulo. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.
CATNEY, G. The complex geographies of ethnic residential segregation: using spatial and local measures to explore scale-dependency and spatial relationships. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, v. 43, n. 1, p. 137-152, 2018.
CATNEY, G.; LLOYD, C. D. Population grids for analysing long-term change in ethnic diversity and segregation. Spatial Demography, v. 8, n. 3, p. 215-249, 2020.
CHESHIRE, P. C. Segregated neighbourhoods and mixed communities: a critical analysis. York [England]: Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2007.
CUNNINGHAM, N.; SAVAGE, M. An intensifying and elite city: new geographies of social class and inequality in contemporary London. City, v. 21, n. 1, p. 25-46, 2017. Available in: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13604813.2016.1263490 Access in: 18 Mar. 2024.
FEITOSA, F. F. et al. Global and local spatial indices of urban segregation. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, v. 21, n. 3, p. 299-323, 2007.
FEITOSA, F. F. et al. Measuring changes in residential segregation in São Paulo in the 2000s. In: VAN HAM, M. et al. (Org.). Urban socio-economic segregation and income inequality. [S.l.]: Springer, 2021. (The Urban Book Series).
FERNANDES, F. A integração do negro na sociedade de classes. 5. ed. São Paulo: Globo, 2008. v. 1.
FOWLER, C. S. Segregation as a multiscalar phenomenon and its implications for neighborhood-scale research: the case of South Seattle 1990/2010. Urban Geography, v. 37, n. 1, p. 1-25, 2016.
FRANÇA, D. Inequalities and residential segregation by race and class. In: MARQUES, E. C. L. (Org.). São Paulo in the twenty-first century: spaces, heterogeneities, inequalities. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2016. p. 160-175.
FRANÇA, D. Segregação residencial por raça e classe em Fortaleza, Salvador e São Paulo. Caderno CRH, v. 35, e022045, 2022. Available in: https://periodicos.ufba.br/index.php/crh/article/view/42018 Access in: 5 Mar. 2024.
FRANÇA, D. S. do N. Raça, classe e segregação residencial no município de São Paulo. Dissertação (Mestrado em Sociologia) - Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2010. Available in: http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8132/tde-28012011-122913/. Access in: 17 Nov. 2021.
GARRETON, M.; BASAURI, A.; VALENZUELA, L. Exploring the correlation between city size and residential segregation: comparing Chilean cities with spatially unbiased indexes. Environment and Urbanization, v. 32, n. 2, p. 569-588, 2020.
GIANNOTTI, M. et al. Inequalities in transit accessibility: contributions from a comparative study between Global South and North metropolitan regions. Cities, v. 109, 2021.
HAMNETT, C. Moving the poor out of central London? The implications of the coalition government 2010 cuts to housing benefits. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, v. 42, n. 12, p. 2809-2819, 2010.
HAMNETT, C. Shrinking the welfare state: the structure, geography and impact of British government benefit cuts. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, v. 39, n. 4, p. 490-503, 2014.
HAMNETT, C. The changing occupational class composition of London. City, v. 19, n. 2-3, p. 239-246, 2015. Available in: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13604813.2015.1014711. Access in: 29 Apr. 2016.
HAMNETT, C. The changing social class structure of London, 2001-2021: continued professionalisation or asymmetric polarisation? Urban Studies, 00420980231213280, 2024. Available in: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00420980231213280 Access in: 18 Mar. 2024.
HAMNETT, C.; BUTLER, T. The changing ethnic structure of housing tenures in London, 1991-2001. Urban Studies, v. 47, n. 1, p. 55-74, 2010.
HARRIS, R.; JOHNSTON, R.; MANLEY, D. The changing interaction of ethnic and socio-economic segregation in England and Wales, 1991-2011. Ethnicities, v. 15, n. 3, 2015. Available in: http://etn.sagepub.com/cgi/doi/10.1177/1468796815595820 Access in: 13 Oct. 2016.
HARRIS, R.; JOHNSTON, R.; MANLEY, D. The changing interaction of ethnic and socio-economic segregation in England and Wales, 1991-2011. Ethnicities, v. 17, n. 3, p. 320-349, 2017.
ICELAND, J.; MATEOS, P.; SHARP, G. Ethnic residential segregation by nativity in Great Britain and the United States. Journal of Urban Affairs, v. 33, n. 4, p. 409-429, 2011.
IMERAJ, L.; WILLAERT, D.; DE VALK, H. A G. A comparative approach towards ethnic segregation patterns in Belgian cities using multiscalar individualized neighborhoods. Urban Geography, v. 39, n. 8, p. 1221-1246, 2018.
IBGE - Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística. Censo Demográfico 2010. Rio de Janeiro: IBGE, 2010.
JOHNSTON, R. et al. Macro-scale stability with micro-scale diversity: modelling changing ethnic minority residential segregation - London 2001-2011. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, v. 41, n. 4, p. 389-402, 2016. Available in: http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/tran.12142 Access in: 11 Aug. 2017.
JOHNSTON, R.; FORREST, J.; POULSEN, M. Are there ethnic enclaves/ghettos in English cities? Urban Studies, v. 39, n. 4, p. 591-618, 2002a. Available in: http://usj.sagepub.com/content/39/4/591.short Access in: 1 Dec. 2016.
JOHNSTON, R.; FORREST, J.; POULSEN, M. The ethnic geography of EthniCities: the ‘American model’ and residential concentration in London. Ethnicities, v. 2, n. 2, p. 209-235, 2002b.
JOHNSTON, R.; POULSEN, M.; FORREST, J. Ethnic residential segregation and assimilation in British towns and cities: a comparison of those claiming single and dual ethnic identities. Migration Letters, v. 3, n. 1, p. 11-30, 2006.
JOHNSTON, R.; POULSEN, M.; FORREST, J. Increasing diversity within increasing diversity: the changing ethnic composition of London’s neighbourhoods, 2001-2011: increasing diversity within increasing diversity. Population, Space and Place, v. 21, n. 1, p. 38-53, 2015.
JOHNSTON, R.; POULSEN, M.; FORREST, J. The comparative study of ethnic residential segregation in the USA, 1980-2000. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, v. 95, n. 5, p. 550-569, 2004.
JOHNSTON, R.; POULSEN, M.; FORREST, J. The geography of ethnic residential segregation: a comparative study of five countries. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, v. 97, n. 4, p. 713-738, 2007.
KAPOOR, N. Rethinking empirical approaches to racial segregation. The Sociological Review, v. 61, n. 3, p. 440-459, 2013.
KOWARICK, L. A espoliação urbana. São Paulo: Editora Paz e Terra, 1979.
LAGO, L. C. do. Desigualdades e segregação na metrópole: o Rio de Janeiro em tempo de crise. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Observatório IPPUR/UFRJ-FASE ; Editora Revan, 2000.
LEES, L. Gentrification, race, and ethnicity: towards a global research agenda? City & Community, v. 15, n. 3, p. 208-214, 2016. Available in: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1111/cico.12185 Access in: 18 Mar. 2024.
LIEBERSON, S. An asymmetrical approach to measuring residential segregation. Toronto: Centre for Urban and Community Studies, University of Toronto, 1980.
MALOUTAS, T. Introduction: residential segregation in context. In: MALOUTAS, T.; FUJITA, K. Residential segregation in comparative perspective: making sense of contextual diversity. Farnham, Surrey, England Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2012. p. 1-36. (Cities and Society Series).
MANLEY, D. Segregation in London: a city of choices or structures? In: VAN HAM, M. et al. (Org.). Urban socio-economic segregation and income inequality. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. p. 311-328. (The Urban Book Series). Available in: https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-030-64569-4_16 Access in: 16 Oct. 2023.
MANLEY, D.; JOHNSTON, R. London: a dividing city, 2001-11? City, v. 18, n. 6, p. 633-643, 2014. Available in: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13604813.2014.962880 Access in: 29 Apr. 2016.
MARQUES, E. São Paulo in the twenty-first century: spaces, heterogeneities, inequalities. London: Routledge, 2016.
MARQUES, E.; BICHIR, R.; SCALON, C. Residential segregation and social structure in São Paulo: continuity and change since the 1990s. In: FUJITA, K.; MALOUTAS, T. (Ed.). Residential segregation in comparative perspective: making sense of contextual diversity. London: Routledge, 2012.
MARQUES, E.; FRANÇA, D. Segregation by class and race in São Paulo. In: MUSTERD, S. (Org.). Handbook of urban segregation. [S.l.]: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2020. p. 36-54.
MATEOS, P. The international comparability of ethnicity classifications and its consequences for segregation Studies. In: LLOYD, C. D.; SHUTTLEWORTH, I.; WONG, D. W. S. (Org.). Social-spatial segregation: concepts, processes and outcomes. Bristol: Policy Press, 2015.
OFFICE FOR NATIONAL STATISTICS. Census aggregate data 2011. UK Data Service (Edition: June 2016). Available in: https://discover.ukdataservice.ac.uk/doi/2011-census-aggregate
OPENSHAW, S. The modifiable area unit problem. Concepts and Techniques in Modern Geography, v. 38, p. 1-41, 1984.
OWUSU, G.; AGYEI-MENSAH, S. A comparative study of ethnic residential segregation in Ghana’s two largest cities, Accra and Kumasi. Population and Environment, v. 32, n. 4, p. 332-352, 2011.
PEACH, C. London and New York: contrasts in British and American models of segregation with a comment by Nathan Glazer. International Jounal of Population Geography, v. 5, p. 319-351, 1999.
PEACH, C. Sleepwalking into Ghettoisation? The British debate over segregation. In: SCHÖNWÄLDER, K. (Org.). Residential segregation and the integration of immigrants: Britain, the Netherlands and Sweden. Berlin: Social Science Research Center Berlin, 2007. (WZB Discussion Paper n. SP IV 2007-602).
PHILLIPS, D. Ethnic and racial segregation: a critical perspective. Geography Compass, v. 1, n. 5, p. 1138-1159, 2007.
POULSEN, M.; JOHNSON, R.; FORREST, J. Plural cities and ethnic enclaves: introducing a measurement procedure for comparative study. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, v. 26, n. 2, p. 229-243, 2002.
PRÉTECEILLE, E.; CARDOSO, A. Socioeconomic segregation and the middle classes in Paris, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo: a comparative perspective. In: MUSTERD, S. (Org.). Handbook of urban segregation. [S.l.]: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2020. p. 270-288.
REARDON, S. F. A conceptual framework for measuring segregation and its association with population outcomes. In: OAKES, J. M.; KAUFMAN, J. S. (Org.). Methods in social epidemiology. 1. ed. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2006. p. 169-192.
REARDON, S. F. et al. The geographic scale of metropolitan racial segregation. Demography, v. 45, n. 3, p. 489-514, 2008.
REARDON, S. F.; O’SULLIVAN, D. Measures of spatial segregation. Sociological Methodology, v. 34, n. 1, p. 121-162, 2004.
REY, S. J.; CORTES, R.; KNAAP, E. Comparative spatial segregation analytics. Spatial Demography, v. 17, 2021.
ROBINSON, J. Cities in a world of cities: the comparative gesture. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, v. 35, n. 1, p. 1-23, 2011.
SAKODA, J. M. A generalized index of dissimilarity. Demography, v. 18, n. 2, p. 245, 1981.
SIMPSON, L.; FINNEY, N. Spatial patterns of internal migration: evidence for ethnic groups in Britain: internal migration of ethnic groups in Britain. Population, Space and Place, v. 15, n. 1, p. 37-56, 2009.
SIN, C. H. The interpretation of segregation indices in context: the case of P in Singapore. The Professional Geographer, v. 54, n. 3, p. 422-437, 2002.
SMITH, D. A. et al. A compact city for the wealthy? Employment accessibility inequalities between occupational classes in the London metropolitan region 2011. Journal of Transport Geography, v. 86, 2020.
SMITH, D. A. Employment accessibility in the London Metropolitan Region: developing a multi-modal travel cost model using OpenTripPlanner and Average Road Speed Data. London: Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London, 2018. (Working Paper, 211). Available in: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/bartlett/casa/publications/2018/sep/casa-working-paper-211
SOUSA FILHO, J. F. de et al. Racial and economic segregation in Brazil: a nationwide analysis of socioeconomic and socio-spatial inequalities. Revista Brasileira de Estudos de População, v. 40, p. 1-24, 2023. Available in: https://rebep.org.br/revista/article/view/2166 Access in: 5 Mar. 2024.
TELLES, E. E. Race, class and space in Brazilian cities. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, v. 19, n. 3, p. 395-406, 1995. Available in: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1468-2427.1995.tb00516.x Access in: 5 Mar. 2024.
TELLES, E. E. Race in another America: the significance of skin color in Brazil. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2006.
TELLES, E. E. Residential segregation by skin color in Brazil. American Sociological Review, v. 57, n. 2, p. 186, abr. 1992. Available in: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2096204?origin=crossref Access in: 30 May 2023.
VALENTE, R. da R.; BERRY, B. J. L. Residential segregation by skin color: Brazil revisited. Latin American Research Review, v. 55, n. 2, p. 207-226, 2020.
VAN HAM, M. et al. Changing occupational structures and residential segregation in New York, London and Tokyo. Nature Human Behaviour, v. 4, n. 11, p. 1124-1134, 2020. Available in: http://www.nature.com/articles/s41562-020-0927-5 Access in: 21 Dec. 2020.
VAN HAM, M. et al. Rising inequalities and a changing social geography of cities. An introduction to the global segregation book. In: VAN HAM, M. et al. (Org.). Urban socio-economic segregation and income inequality. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. p. 3-26. (The Urban Book Series). Available in: https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-030-64569-4_1 Access in: 18 Mar. 2024.
VILLAÇA, F. Espaço intra-urbano no Brasil. São Paulo, SP: Studio Nobel, 1998.
WONG, D. W. S. Comparing traditional and spatial segregation measures: a spatial scale perspective. Urban Geography, v. 25, n. 1, p.
-82, 2004.
WONG, D. W. S. Geostatistics as measures of spatial segregation. Urban Geography, v. 20, n. 7, p. 635-647, 1999.
WONG, D. W. S. Spatial dependency of segregation indices. Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe Canadien, v. 41, n. 2, p. 128-136, 1997.
Downloads
Publicado
Como Citar
Edição
Seção
Licença
Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Brasileira de Estudos de População
Este trabalho está licenciado sob uma licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Os artigos publicados na Rebep são originais e protegidos sob a licença Creative Commons do tipo atribuição (CC-BY). Essa licença permite reutilizar as publicações na íntegra ou parcialmente para qualquer propósito, de forma gratuita, mesmo para fins comerciais. Qualquer pessoa ou instituição pode copiar, distribuir ou reutilizar o conteúdo, desde que o autor e a fonte original sejam propriamente mencionados.