Abstract

Based on a comparative case study on two neighborhoods in Bogota and Rio de Janeiro (2017–2019) and a comprehensive literature review, this article proposes a critical Public Health approach to urban violence and makes a case for understanding the phenomenon in the context of market-driven urban territorial restructuring processes that assume specific qualities in cities of the Global South. The case studies are based on focus groups and semi-structured interviews with residents, specialists and community leaders. It is argued that urban violence is a key public health challenge, particularly in Latin America, given its dimensions and its impact on the populations’ life and health. In this regard it configures “fractured lives” in what urban scholars have termed “fractured cities” - essentially unequal and polarized cities that are not merely sites of urban violence but, as we argue in this article, fundamentally shape urban violence, its qualities, dynamics and dimensions. The study is informed by a unique theoretical articulation between Latin American Social Medicine and Collective Health, critical (Latin American) geographical theory and authoritarian neoliberalism literature and shows how urban violence is directly implied in the territorial making and un-making of the cities, driven by commodification as well as both legal and illegal capitalist market logics, that include but are not limited to drug trade. The cases reflect the violence implied in permanent threats of eviction and displacement, “necropolitical” police/military interventions and what is described as a silent imposition of a “slow death” on infrastructure, the neighborhood and ultimately also its residents, which “fracture” the lives of significant parts of the urban population, produce “ill-being” and bring about health consequences that are rarely considered in relation to urban violence.

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