Affiliation(s)
1. Graduate Program in Urbanism-Prourb, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro-RJ, 21941-901, Brazil
2. Department of Urbanism and Environment, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro-RJ, 21941-901, Brazil
ABSTRACT
In many countries mobility is one of the pillars of public policies for
urban development. The “right to mobility”has been assimilated to the very
concept of the “right to the city” put forward by Henri Lefebvre a half century
ago. However, based on recent surveys, the present paper intends to show that a
greater offer of mobility can have the opposite effect of increasing the
economic dependence of poor peripheries, thus contributing to the phenomenon of
socio-spatial segregation. To show this perverse effect of mobility, we use the
results drawn out from case studies located in the Metropolitan Region of Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil. In this context, the areas with the greatest mobility offer
correspond to those that are now more dependent and emptied of employment and
daily urban life. This greater accessibility has the effect of transforming
these better served areas into dormitory peripheries. In contrast, other areas,
with much less mobility offer, are able to avoid this direct competition with
the city center. In conclusion, the paper proposes a necessary revision of the
concept of mobility as a foundation for urban development which became even
more pressing under the current COVID-19 crisis.
KEYWORDS
Metropolitan periphery, social segregation, urban
development, urban mobility.
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