Abstract

Living in the city’s ravines is the common destiny of thousands of poor urban dwellers in Guatemala City, as is too often the case elsewhere in the Global South. The ravines surrounding the city represent one of the most visible and unjust urban spaces in the nation’s capital. At the same time, Guatemala City has been among the most violent cities in the world and is highly vulnerable to climate change. Employing a critical spatial perspective and drawing on interviews in two at‐risk communities—Arzú and 5 de Noviembre—this article examines the social production of such peripheral spaces. The levels of exclusion and inequalities are analysed by focusing on the multiple manifestations (visible and invisible) of violence and environmental risks, and deciphering the complex dynamics of both issues, which in turn generate more unequal and harmful conditions for residents. This article draws on the theoretical ideas elaborated by Edward Soja, Mustafa Dikeç, and Teresa Caldeira on the contextualisation of spatial injustice and peripheral urbanisation to study the specific conditions of urban life and analyse the collective struggles of people in both communities to improve their current living conditions and mitigate the risk and the precariousness of their existence. The article underlines the need to make the processes of urban exclusion and extreme inequality visible to better understand how they have been socially and politically constructed. The research argues for more socially and ecologically inclusive cities within the process of unequal urbanisation.

Highlights

  • Latin American cities are the prime domains of inequali‐ ties and violence deeply related to social and economic exclusion (Briceño‐León & Zubillaga, 2002; Koonings & Kruijt, 2007, 2009, 2015; Moser & McIlwaine, 2004; Muggah & Aguirre, 2018; Roberts, 2010)

  • Conflict and violence are strongly associated with a high incidence of urban insecurity and fear, a multidimensional and manifold phenomenon affecting all sectors of society, but especially critical for poor urban areas (McIlwaine & Moser, 2007)

  • This article has examined the spatial production ofjustice and exclusion in two communities located in the ravines of Guatemala City, focusing on the multi‐ ple perceptions and manifestations of violence and envi‐ ronmental hazards and vulnerabilities

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Summary

Introduction

Latin American cities are the prime domains of inequali‐ ties and violence deeply related to social and economic exclusion (Briceño‐León & Zubillaga, 2002; Koonings & Kruijt, 2007, 2009, 2015; Moser & McIlwaine, 2004; Muggah & Aguirre, 2018; Roberts, 2010). Conflict and violence are strongly associated with a high incidence of urban insecurity and fear, a multidimensional and manifold phenomenon affecting all sectors of society, but especially critical for poor urban areas (McIlwaine & Moser, 2007). I examine the structural dynamics that produce and reproduce injustice through space (Caldeira, 2017; Dikeç, 2001; Soja, 2010), focus‐ ing on the multiple manifestations of violence and envi‐ ronmental hazards and vulnerabilities in two “precar‐ ious settlements” (the term used in Central America). Provides a deeper understanding of the dynamics of extreme urban and social exclusion

Spatial Justice
Qualitative Research Methods in Violent Settings
Precarious Settlements in the Ravines
Occupying the Ravines
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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