Subtopic Deep Dive
Residential Segregation in Latin American Cities
Research Guide
What is Residential Segregation in Latin American Cities?
Residential segregation in Latin American cities refers to the spatial concentration of socioeconomic groups in distinct urban neighborhoods, driven by neoliberal policies and inequality.
Researchers analyze segregation patterns in cities like São Paulo, Mexico City, and Santiago using GIS mapping and census data. Key studies examine policy impacts on urban space construction (Gómez López et al., 2014). Two primary papers document these dynamics, with zero citations each due to niche focus.
Why It Matters
Segregation patterns shape urban inequality and policy responses in Latin America. Gómez López et al. (2014) show how neoliberalism and habitat policies in Tucumán, Argentina, produce heterogeneous urban spaces with high socioeconomic disparities. Herrero Olarte et al. (2025) link residential segregation to neighborhood vitality and poverty reduction, informing public policies for mixed-income areas and social cohesion.
Key Research Challenges
Measuring Segregation Indices
Quantifying segregation requires indices like dissimilarity or entropy, but census data limitations hinder accuracy in Latin American contexts. Gómez López et al. (2014) highlight data gaps in tracking neoliberal policy effects on urban heterogeneity. Standardized metrics across cities remain elusive.
Policy Impact Attribution
Linking habitat policies to segregation changes demands longitudinal data, often unavailable. In Tucumán, Gómez López et al. (2014) analyze public interventions but note causal inference challenges from demographic shifts. Confounding factors like migration complicate assessments.
Neoliberal Heterogeneity Analysis
Neoliberal models create uneven urban development, hard to model spatially. Herrero Olarte et al. (2025) quantify Jacobs-style vitality amid segregation but stress policy absence. Integrating socioeconomic and functional metrics poses methodological hurdles.
Essential Papers
Impactos de las políticas públicas de hábitat en la construcción del espacio urbano: el caso del Área Metropolitana de Tucumán, Argentina
Claudia Gómez López, Rosa Lina Cuozzo, Paula Boldrini · 2014 · 9° Congresso Città e Territorio Virtuale, Roma, 2, 3 e 4 ottobre 2013 · 0 citations
En América Latina, la implantación del neoliberalismo como sistema económico ha llevado a un modelo de desarrollo con elevada heterogeneidad y desigualdad socioeconómica. De la mano de grandes camb...
Cuantificando a Jacobs: más vitalidad, menos pobreza
Susana Herrero Olarte, Esteban Vaca, Valeria Paz · 2025 · ACE Arquitectura Ciudad y Entorno · 0 citations
Davant la falta de política pública, la segregació residencial té una capacitat fonamental per a definir la forma i la funció de les ciutats a Amèrica Llatina. Els barris tenen característiques dis...
Reading Guide
Foundational Papers
Start with Gómez López et al. (2014) for baseline on neoliberalism's role in Argentine urban segregation and policy impacts.
Recent Advances
Study Herrero Olarte et al. (2025) for advances in quantifying neighborhood vitality amid segregation.
Core Methods
GIS for spatial patterns; inequality indices from census data; Jacobs-inspired vitality metrics.
How PapersFlow Helps You Research Residential Segregation in Latin American Cities
Discover & Search
PapersFlow's Research Agent uses searchPapers and exaSearch to find niche literature on Tucumán segregation (Gómez López et al., 2014), then citationGraph reveals policy impact connections despite zero citations. findSimilarPapers extends to Santiago or Mexico City cases.
Analyze & Verify
Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent to Gómez López et al. (2014) abstracts, verifying neoliberal claims via verifyResponse (CoVe) and runPythonAnalysis for inequality index computation from census excerpts. GRADE grading scores evidence strength on policy-segregation links.
Synthesize & Write
Synthesis Agent detects gaps in Herrero Olarte et al. (2025) vitality metrics, flagging contradictions with Gómez López et al. (2014); Writing Agent uses latexEditText, latexSyncCitations for reports, and latexCompile for publication-ready docs with exportMermaid segregation maps.
Use Cases
"Analyze segregation trends in Argentine cities using GIS data from recent papers."
Research Agent → searchPapers('residential segregation Tucumán') → Analysis Agent → runPythonAnalysis (pandas GIS mapping on Gómez López et al., 2014 data) → matplotlib segregation heatmap output.
"Draft a LaTeX report comparing Tucumán and vitality studies."
Synthesis Agent → gap detection (Herrero Olarte et al., 2025 vs. Gómez López et al., 2014) → Writing Agent → latexEditText + latexSyncCitations + latexCompile → formatted PDF with cited policy analysis.
"Find code for computing segregation indices from Latin American census data."
Research Agent → paperExtractUrls (Herrero Olarte et al., 2025) → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → Python scripts for dissimilarity index computation.
Automated Workflows
Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review: searchPapers(50+ Latin America segregation) → citationGraph → structured report on trends from Gómez López et al. (2014). DeepScan applies 7-step analysis with CoVe checkpoints to verify Herrero Olarte et al. (2025) vitality claims against census data. Theorizer generates policy theories from literature gaps in neoliberal urbanism.
Frequently Asked Questions
What defines residential segregation in Latin American cities?
Spatial concentration of socioeconomic groups in distinct neighborhoods, exacerbated by neoliberal policies (Gómez López et al., 2014).
What methods measure segregation here?
GIS mapping, census-based indices like dissimilarity; vitality quantification per Jacobs (Herrero Olarte et al., 2025).
What are key papers?
Gómez López et al. (2014) on Tucumán habitat policies; Herrero Olarte et al. (2025) on vitality and poverty.
What open problems exist?
Causal attribution of policies to segregation; scalable metrics for city comparisons beyond Tucumán.
Research Latin American Urban Studies with AI
PapersFlow provides specialized AI tools for your field researchers. Here are the most relevant for this topic:
AI Literature Review
Automate paper discovery and synthesis across 474M+ papers
Deep Research Reports
Multi-source evidence synthesis with counter-evidence
Paper Summarizer
Get structured summaries of any paper in seconds
AI Academic Writing
Write research papers with AI assistance and LaTeX support
Start Researching Residential Segregation in Latin American Cities with AI
Search 474M+ papers, run AI-powered literature reviews, and write with integrated citations — all in one workspace.
Part of the Latin American Urban Studies Research Guide