Abstract

Cities across the global south are seeing unprecedented levels of violence that generate intense risks and vulnerability. Such problems are often experienced most viscerally among poorer residents, thus reinforcing longstanding socio-spatial conditions of exclusion, inequality, and reduced quality of life for those most exposed to urban violence. Frequently, these problems are understood through the lens of poverty, informality, and limited employment opportunities. Yet an undertheorized and equally significant factor in the rise of urban violence derives from the shifting territorialities of governance and power, which are both cause and consequence of ongoing struggles within and between citizens and state authorities over the planning and control of urban space. This article suggests that a relatively underexplored but revealing way to understand these dynamics, and how they drive violence, is through the lens of sovereignty. Drawing on examples primarily from Mexico, and other parts of urban Latin America, I suggest that problems of urban violence derive from fragmented sovereignty, a condition built upon the emergence of alternative, competing, and at times overlapping networks of territorial authority at the scale of the city, nation, and globe. In addition to theorizing the shifting spatial correlates of sovereignty among state and non-state armed actors, and showing how these dynamics interact with urbanization patterns to produce violence, I argue that the spatial form of the city both produces and is produced by changing political and economic relations embedded in urban planning principles. That is, urban planning practices must be seen as the cause, and not merely the solution, to problems of urban violence and its deleterious effects. Using these claims to dialogue with urban planners, this essay calls for new efforts to redesign cities and urban spaces with a focus on territorial connectivities and socio-spatial integration, so as to push back against the limits of fragmented sovereignty arrangements, minimize violence, and foster inclusion and justice.

Highlights

  • In many parts of Latin America, urban violence has been on the rise (Arias & Goldstein, 2010; Bergman & Whitehead, 2009; Fruhling, Tulchin, & Golding, 2003; Laguerre, 1994; Moser, 2004; Rotker, 2002; Smulovitz, 2003)

  • Urban Planning, 2020, Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 206–216 citizens in urban Latin America is the trauma of violence at the scales of both neighborhoods and cities as a whole (Arias, 2006a)

  • Sovereignty as a concept allows for an understanding of the ways that citizens may distribute their political allegiances to actors operating at territorial scales both smaller and larger than nation-states, including through relationships with non-state armed actors who may use violence to achieve their aims and seek to control territories of trade in ways that challenge the authority of states

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Summary

Introduction

In many parts of Latin America, urban violence has been on the rise (Arias & Goldstein, 2010; Bergman & Whitehead, 2009; Fruhling, Tulchin, & Golding, 2003; Laguerre, 1994; Moser, 2004; Rotker, 2002; Smulovitz, 2003). Sovereignty as a concept allows for an understanding of the ways that citizens may distribute their political allegiances to actors operating at territorial scales both smaller and larger than nation-states, including through relationships with non-state armed actors who may use violence to achieve their aims and seek to control territories of trade in ways that challenge the authority of states In making this argument, I do not necessarily seek to question or contradict other theoretical apparatuses used to explain spatial inequality, social injustice, or other related outcomes produced by hegemonic state planning practices in capitalist societies, such as those proposed by David Harvey (1985, 2001) among others, or their relevance for understanding power and inequality Latin American cities.

Modernist Urban Planning Paradigms and the Production of Spatial Inequality
Limitations within the Planning Profession
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