2016
DOI: 10.3390/su8080820
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Breaking Resilient Patterns of Inequality in Santiago de Chile: Challenges to Navigate towards a More Sustainable City

Abstract: Abstract:Resilience can have desirable and undesirable consequences. Thus, resilience should not be viewed as a normative desirable goal, but as a descriptor of complex systems dynamics. From this perspective, we apply resilience thinking concepts to assess the dynamics of inequality, spatial segregation, and sustainability in Chile's capital city of Santiago. Chile's economy boosted since democracy was restored in 1990, but continuity of neoliberal reforms and transformations of Pinochet's dictatorship (1973)… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Using this SCI, Putnam argued that social capital had a profound effect on how American states performed in terms of economic prosperity, health and happiness, democracy, criminal justice and public education, among others. An equally resilient system in public education and health is necessary to decrease income inequality and to sustain economic development [10,11]. While Putnam's seminal work on social capital has drawn attention from both scholarly communities as well as popular media outlets, his SCI has not produced a uniform level of support among scholars.…”
Section: Social Capital Racial Diversity and Income Inequalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using this SCI, Putnam argued that social capital had a profound effect on how American states performed in terms of economic prosperity, health and happiness, democracy, criminal justice and public education, among others. An equally resilient system in public education and health is necessary to decrease income inequality and to sustain economic development [10,11]. While Putnam's seminal work on social capital has drawn attention from both scholarly communities as well as popular media outlets, his SCI has not produced a uniform level of support among scholars.…”
Section: Social Capital Racial Diversity and Income Inequalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Just as inequality can be sustainable, so communities living in poverty can be resilient. We must be wary of promoting resilience in the context of austerity politics which withdraw municipal support from neighborhoods because they are 'resilient' (Fernández, Manuel-Navarrete and Torres-Salinas, 2016).…”
Section: Resilience and Austeritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sustainable urban development is high on Africa's development agenda because the rate of urbanization has almost doubled since the early 1990s [8]. However, pervasive poverty, inequalities, climate change, and poor urban spatial planning have hampered cities' ability to become more resilient [24].…”
Section: Urban Governance and Sustainability In Africamentioning
confidence: 99%