Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T13:12:58.429Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

5 - Urban growth and urban social structure in Latin America, 1930–1990

from PART THREE - ECONOMY AND SOCIETY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Orlandina de Oliveira
Affiliation:
El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico, D.F.
Bryan Roberts
Affiliation:
University of Texas at Austin
Leslie Bethell
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Get access

Summary

This chapter analyses the changes in urban social structure, and especially the changes in occupation structure, in Latin America from the 1930s to the 1980s that resulted from the coming together of three processes: rapid urbanization; industrialization in its different stages; and the growing importance in the Latin American economies of the service sector, both traditional services and modern services linked to the growth of government bureaucracy and to twentieth-century business practices (technical, financial, administrative). In developed countries similar processes produced a convergence of social structures: the expansion of the middle classes, the consolidation of an industrial working-class, and improvements in the general welfare of the population. In the case of Latin America, there has been a greater heterogeneity in patterns of stratification. The dependence of the region on foreign technology and, increasingly, on external finance, combined with its role in the world economy as a supplier of primary and, hence, rurally based commodities, resulted in an uneven modernization, both between countries and between regions of the same country. This chapter will emphasize these differences and the need to pay attention to the specific situation of each country.

In terms of social stratification, there was in Latin America a contradictory relationship between urban growth, economic development and modernization. The cities multiplied and concentrated economic resources. Industrial growth stimulated the increase in levels of education, the proletarianization of the labour force and also the expansion of the non-manual sectors. On the other hand, this same urban growth brought with it a marked polarization of the social structure, both in terms of income and in labour conditions as shown by the persistence of non-waged forms of labour (self-employed workers, unpaid family workers) and highly skewed income distributions.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altamirano, T. shows both the poverty of highland indian migrants in Lima, but also their capacity for organization in face of difficult material circumstances: Presencia Andina en Lima Metropolitana (Lima, 1984)Google Scholar
Altamirano, T.Cultura Andina y Pobreza Urbana (Lima, 1988).Google Scholar
Anker, Richard and Hein, Catherine, ‘Empleo de la mujer fuera de la agricultura en países del tercer mundo: panorama general de las estadísticas ocupacionales’, en Desigualdades Entre Hombres y Mujeres en los Mercados de Trabajo Urbano del Tercer Mundo (Geneva, 1987).Google Scholar
Argentina, , Lattes, Zulma Recchini, ‘Empleo feminino y desarrollo económico: algunos tendencias’, Dasarrollo Economico, 17, 66(1977)Google Scholar
Arias, P.La pequena empresa en el occidente rural’, Estudios Sociologicos, 6, 17 (Mexico, D.F., 1988)Google Scholar
Balán, Browning and Jelin, study of geographic and social mobility in Monterrey, Mexico, Men in a Developing Society (1973)
Balán, Jorge, Harley, L. Browning and Jelin, Elizabeth, Men in a Developing Society: Geographic and Social Mobility in Monterrey (Austin, Tex., 1973)Google Scholar
Balán, JorgeEstructuras agrarias y migración en una perspectiva histórica: estudios de casos latinoamericanos’, Revista Mexicana de Sociologia, XLII/I, (1981)Google Scholar
Balán, JorgeInternational Migration in the Southern Cone (Buenos Aires, 1985).Google Scholar
Balán, JorgeMigrant native socioeconomic differences in Latin American cities, a structural analysis’, Latin American Research Review, 4, 1 (1969)Google Scholar
Bock, W. and Iutaka, S. review data from Buenos Aires, Sāo Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Santiago to reach this conclusion: ‘Rural-urban Migration and Social Mobility: the controversy on Latin America’, Rural Sociology, 34, 3, (1969).Google Scholar
Bruschini, C.Tendências da Força de Trabalho Feminina Brasileira nos Anas Setenta a Oitenta: Algumas Comparaçōes Regionais (Sāo Paulo, 1989).Google Scholar
Butterworth, D. and Chance, J. K., Latin American Urbanization (Cambridge, 1981).Google Scholar
Cardoso, F. H. and Reyna, J. L., ‘Industrialización, estructura ocupacional y estratificación social en América Latina’, Cardoso, F. H. (ed.) Cuestiones de Sociología del Desarrollo de América Latina (Santiago, 1968).Google Scholar
Cardoso, F. H.Ideologías de la Burguesía Industrial en Sociedades Dependientes (Mexico, D. F., 1971).Google Scholar
,CEPAL, América Latina: las mujeres y los cambios socio-ocupacionales 1960–1980 Documento LC/R. 504 (1986)
,CEPAL, Transformación Ocupacional y Crisis Social en América Latina (Santiago, 1989).
Chamorro, AmáliaChávez, Mario, and Membreno, Marcos, ‘El sector informal en Nicaragua’, in Sainz, J. P. Pérez and Menjívar, Rafael (eds), Informalidad Urbana en Centroamerica: Entre la Acumulación y la Subsistencia (San Jose, 1991).Google Scholar
Chile, , Pantelides, Edith, Estudios de la población feminina económicamente activa en América Latina, 1950–1970 (Santiago, 1976)Google Scholar
Cortés, Fernando and Rubalcava, Rosa María, Autoexplotación Forzada y Equidad por Empobrecimiento (Mexico, D.F., 1991).Google Scholar
Cortes, Fernando and Rubalcava, Rosa María, Autoexplotación Forzada y Equidad por Empobrerimiento (Mexico, D. F., 1991)Google Scholar
Durston, , ‘Transición estructural’ and CEPAL, Transformación Ocupacional y Crisis Social en América Latina (Santiago, 1989)Google Scholar
Echeverría, RafaelEmpleo Público en América LatinaColección sobre Empleo, num. 26 (Santiago, 1985).Google Scholar
,ECLAC, Statistical Yearbook for Latin America and the Caribbean, 1989 (Santiago, 1989).
Edel, Matthew and Ronald, G. Hellman (eds) Cities in Crisis: the Urban Challenge in the Americas (New York, 1989)Google Scholar
Escobar, Agustin and Bryan, R. Roberts, ‘Urban Stratification, the Middle Classes, and Economic change in Mexico’, in Rocha, Mercedes González and Latapi, Agustín Secobar (eds), Social Responses to Mexico's Economic Crisis of the 1980s (San Diego, 1991).Google Scholar
Escobar, AgustínCon el sudor de tu frente (Guadalajara, 1986).Google Scholar
Escobar, AgustinThe Rise and Fall of an Urban Labor Market: economic crisis and the fate of small-scale workshops in Guadalajara, Mexico’, Bulletin of Latin American Research, 7, 2, (1988).Google Scholar
Estadistica, X Censo de la Población, 1930 (Santiago, 1931), Vol. III.Google Scholar
,Federal Gustavo Garza y Departamento del Distrito, Atlas de la Ciudad de Mexico (Mexico, D.F., 1987)
García, BrígidaDesarrollo Económico y Absorción de Fuerza de Trabajo en México: 1950–1980 (Mexico, D.F., 1988)Google Scholar
García, BrigidaMunoz, Humberto and Oliveira, Orlandina, ‘Migration, Family Context and Labour-force Participation in Mexico, D.F.’, in Balán, Jorge, (ed.), Why People Move (Paris, 1981).Google Scholar
García, BrigidaMunoz, Humberto and Oliveira, Orlandina, Hogares y Trabajadores en la Ciudad at México (Mexico, D. F., 1982).Google Scholar
García, BrigidaMunoz, Humberto and Oliveira, Orlandina, ‘Migración, familia y fuerza de trabajo en la Ciudad de México;Cuadernos del CES 26 (Mexico, D.F. 1979).Google Scholar
García, BrigidaDesarrollo Económico y Absorción de Fuerza de Trabajo en México: 1950–1980 (Mexico, D.F., 1988)Google Scholar
García, Mexico Orlandina Oliveira BrigidaExpansión del trabajo feminino y transformación social en México: 1950–1987mimeo (Mexico, D.F., 1988).Google Scholar
García, Munoz and Oliveira, , ‘Migración’: Mercedes González de la Rocha, Los Recursos de la Pobreza: Familias de Bajos Ingresos en Guadalajara (Mexico, D.F., 1986).Google Scholar
Gatica, JaimeCaracterísticas y Ajuste del Empleo Formal: Brasil, 1985–1987, Textos para Discussāo, nú,. 7 (Brasília, 1988).Google Scholar
Gilbert, Alan and Peter, Ward, Housing, the State and the Poor: Policy and Practice in Three Latin American Cities (Cambridge, 1985)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilbert, Alan and Ann, Varley, ‘Renting a Home in a Third World City: choice or constraint?’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 14, 1 (1990).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González de la, Mercedes Rocha's longitudinal study of household coping strategies in Guadalajara, Mexico: ‘Economic Crisis, Domestic Reorganization and Women's Work in Guadalajara, Mexico’, Bulletin of Latin American Research, 7, 2 (1988).Google Scholar
Heroles, Reyes J.Polilica Macroeconómica y Bienestar en México (Mexico, D. F., 1983).Google Scholar
Horizonte, , Merrick, Belo T. W. and Schmink, M., ‘Female Headed Households and Urban Poverty in Brazil’, paper presented to workshop on ‘Mujeres en la pobreza: qué sabemos?Belmonr Conference Centre (1978).Google Scholar
Iglesias, EnriqueLa crisis económica internacional y las perspectivas de América Latina’, in América Latina y la Crisis Internacional (Montevideo, 1983)Google Scholar
Imaz, J. L.Estructura social de una ciudad pampeana’, Cuaderno de Sociologia, 1–2(1965)Google Scholar
Imaz, J. L.Los que Mandan (Buenos Aires, 1964).Google Scholar
,INEGI, ‘Encuesta nacional de Empleo Urbana: Indicadores Trimestrales de Empleo’, (Aquascalientes, 1988)
,Instituto Nacional de Estadistica (Peru), Perú: Algunas Características de la Población: Resultados Provisionales del Censo del 12 de Julio de 1981 Boletin Especial No. 6 (Lima, 1981).
,International Labour Office, World Labour Report, 1989 (Geneva, 1989).
Jelín, Elizabeth questions the usefulness of classing the self-employed with the middle strata: ‘Trabajadores por su cuenta propia y asalariados: distinción vertical u horizontal?’. Revista Latinoamericana de Sociología (1967)Google Scholar
Jelin, ElizabethLa Mujer y el Mercado de Trabajo Urbano (Buenos Aires, 1978).Google Scholar
Kirsch, HenryEl empleo y el aprovechamiento de los recursos humanos en América Latina’, Boletín Económico de América Latina, Vol. XVIII, 1 and 2 (1973).Google Scholar
Kowarick, LucioThe Logic of Disorder: capitalist expansion in the metropolitan area of greater Sāo Paulo’, Discussion Paper (Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, 1977)Google Scholar
Kowarick, LucioEspoliaçāo Urbana (Rio de Janeiro, 1979).Google Scholar
Laice, JulianIndustrial Development and Migrant labor in Latin America (Austin, Tex., 1981)Google Scholar
Lattes, Argentina Zulma RecchiniDinámica de la Fuerza de Trabajo Feminina en la Argentina (Paris, 1983)Google Scholar
Leeds, AnthonyThe Significant Variables Determining the Character of Squatter Settlements’, América Latina, 12, 3 (1969)Google Scholar
Lewis, OscarThe Children of Sanchez: an Autobiography of a Mexican Family (New York, 1961)Google Scholar
Lewis, OscarLa Vida (New York, 1968).Google Scholar
Lomnitz, Larissa and Lizuar, Mariso Pérez, A Mexican Elite Family: 1820–1980: Kinship, Class and Culture (Princeton, N.J., 1987).Google Scholar
Lomnitz, LarissaNetworks and Marginality in a Mexican Shantytown (New York, 1977).Google Scholar
Long, Norman and Bryan, R. Roberts, Miners, Peasants, and Entrepreneurs: Regional Development in the Central Highlands of Peru (Cambridge, 1984).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Madeira, F. R. and Singer, P., ‘Estructura do emprego e trabalho feminino no Brasil: 1920–1970’, Cuaderno 13 (Sāo Paulo, 1973).Google Scholar
Mangin, W.Latin American Squatter Settlements: A Problem and a Solution’, Latin American Research Review, 2, 3 (1967)Google Scholar
Margulis, and Tuirán, R., El mercado de trabajo en el capitalismo periférico: el caso de Reynosa (Mexico, D.F., 1986).Google Scholar
Margulis, M.Migración y marginalidad en la sociedad argentina (Buenos Aires, 1970)Google Scholar
Marshall, A.El mercado de trabajo en el capitalismo periférico: el caso de Argentina (Santiago, 1978)Google Scholar
Marshall, A.Non-standard Employment Practices in Latin America’, in Discussion Paper OP/06/1987, (Geneva, 1987)Google Scholar
Matos Mar, J.Urbanización y Barriadas en América del Sur (Lima, 1968)Google Scholar
Medeiros, AntonioPolitics and Intergovernmental Relations in Brazil, 1964–1982 (New York, 1986).Google Scholar
Menjívar, Rafael and Sainz, J. P. Pérez (eds), Informalidad Urbana en Centroamérica: Entre la Acumulación y la Subsistencia (San José, 1991)Google Scholar
Mesa-Lago, CarmeloSocial Security in Latina America: Pressure Groups, Stratification and Inequality (Pittsburgh, Penn., 1978)Google Scholar
Mesa-Lago, CarmeloSocial Security and and Extreme Poverty in Latin America’, Journal of Development Economics, 12 (1983)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mesa-Lago, CarmeloSocial Security and Development in Latin America’, CEPAL Review, 28 (1986).Google Scholar
Morse, R.Trends and Issues in Latin American Urban Research’, Latin American Research Review, 6, 1–2, (1971)Google Scholar
Munoz, Humberto and Suarez, Herlinda, Educación y Empleo: Ciudad de México, Guadalajara y Monterrey (Cuernavaca, 1989).Google Scholar
Munoz, Humberto and Oliveira, Orlandina, ‘Algunas controversias sobre la fuerza de trabajo en América Latina’, in Katzman, R. and Reyna, J. (eds), Fuerza de trabajo y movimientos laborales en América Latina (Mexico, D.F., 1979).Google Scholar
Munoz, Humberto, Oliveira, Orlandina and Stern, Claudio, Migración y desigualdad social en la ciudad de México (Mexico, D. F., 1977)Google Scholar
Munoz, Oliveira and Sterns, study of Mexico City, Migración y daigualdad social en la ciudad de México (1977).
Nieto, Mercedes PedreroEvolución de la participación económica feminina en los ochenta,’ Revista Mexicana de Sociologia, LII, 1 (1990).Google Scholar
Oliveira, Orlandina and García, Brigida, ‘Migración a grandes ciudades del Tercer Mundo: algunos implicaciones sociodemográficas’, Estudios Sociológicos, Mexico, D. F., 2/4 (1984).Google Scholar
Oliveira, Orlandina and García, Brígida, ‘Cambios en fecundidad, trabajo y condición feminina en México’, Paper presented at XXII World Congress of Sociology (Madrid, 1990)Google Scholar
Pantelides, , Edith Estudios de la población feminina económicamente activa en América Latina, 1950–1970 (Santiago, 1976).Google Scholar
Peattie, LisaThe View from the Barrio (Ann Arbor, Mich., 1968)Google Scholar
Pena, Guillermo laDuran, Juan Manuel, Agustín Escobar and Javier García de Alba, Crisis, Conflicto y Sobrevivencia: Estudios Sobre la Sociedad Urbana en Mexico (Guadalajara, 1990)Google Scholar
Portes, Alejandro when he contrasts the patterns of spatial polarization in Santiago with Bogotá and Montevideo: ‘Latin American Urbanization During the Years of the Crisis’, Latin American Research Review, 24, 3(1989).Google Scholar
Portes, Alejandro discussion of the first three of these criteria as means to characterize the Latin American class structure: ‘Latin American Class Structures’, Latin American Research Review, XX, 3 (1985).Google Scholar
Portes, AlejandroLatin American Urbanization During the Years of the Crisis’, Latin American Research Review, 24, 3 (1989).Google Scholar
Portes, AlejandroRationality in the Slum’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 14, 3 (1972)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Portes, AlejandroCastells, Manuel and Benton, Lauren A. (eds) The Informal Economy: Studies in Advanced and Less Developed Countries (Baltimore, Md., 1989).Google Scholar
,PREALC, ‘Desarticulación social en la perifería latinoamericana’, Documento de Trabajo (Santiago, 1987).
,PREALC, ‘La evolución del mercado laboral entre 1980 y 1987’, Work Document series, No. 328 (Santiago, 1988).
,PREALC, ‘Pobreza y mercado de trabajo en cuatro países: Costa Rica, Venezuela, Chile y Perú’, Documento de trabajo (Santiago, 1987).
,PREALC, Empleo y salarios (Santiago, 1983).
,PREALC, Mercado de trabajo en cifras 1950–1980 (Santiago, 1982).
,PRELEAC, Mercado de trabajo en cifras 1950–1980 (Santiago, 1982).
,PresupuestoSecretaría de Programación y(SPP), La Ocupación Informal en Areas Urbanas (Mexico, D.F., 1979)
Recife, , Garcia, Brigida, Munoz, Humberto and Oliveira, Orlandina, Familia y Mercado de Trabajo. Un atudio de dos ciudades brasilenas (Mexico, D.F., 1983).Google Scholar
Reina, RubenParana: Social Boundaries in an Argensine City (Austin, Tex., 1973).Google Scholar
Rendón, Teresa and Salas, Carlos, ‘Evolutión del empleo en México: 1895–1980’, Estudios Demográficos y Urbanos, 2, 2 (Mexico, D.F., 1987).Google Scholar
Roberts, Bryan R.Organizing Strangers: Poor Families in Guatemala City, (Austin, Tex., 1973)Google Scholar
Roberts, Bryan R.Employment Structure, Life Cycle and Life Changes: forman and informal sectors in Guadalajara’, in Portes, A., Castells, M. and Benton, L. (eds), The informal economy in comparative perspective (Baltimore, Md., 1989).Google Scholar
Roberts, BryanEducation, urbanization and social change’, in Brown, R. (ed.), Knowledge, Education and Cultural Change (London, 1973).Google Scholar
Rocha, Mercedes González laDe por qué las mujeres aguantan golpes y cuernos: un análysis de hogares sin varón en Guadalajara,’ in Gabayet, Luisa et al., Mujeres y Sociedad: Salario, Hogar y Actión Social en el Occidente de México (Guadalajara, 1988)Google Scholar
Roldan, Marta and Benería, Lourdes, The Crossroads of Class and Gender (Chicago, Ill., 1987).Google Scholar
Rolnik, RaquelEl Brasil urbano de los anos 80: un retrato’, in Lombardi, M. and Veiga, D. (eds), Las Cuidades en Conflicto (Montevideo, 1989).Google Scholar
Sainz, J. P. PérezCiudad Subsistencia e Informalidad: Tres Estudios sobre el Area Metropolitans en Guatemala (Guatemala City, 1990).Google Scholar
Santos, S. Cutolo dos and Ramos, C. A. argue that expanding public employment was a deliberate policy aimed at weakening public protest during economic crisis: Mercados de Trabalho no Setor Público Federal: Subsídios para o Debate, Textos para Discussāo, núm. 9 (Brasília, 1988).Google Scholar
Selby, HenryMurphy, Arthur D. and Lorenzer, Stephen A., The Mexican Urban Household Organizing for Self-Defense (Austin, Tex., 1990).Google Scholar
,SPP, La Ocupación Informal en Areas Urbanas (Mexico, D.F., 1979).
Standing, GuyGlobal Feminisation through Flexible Labour, Labour Market Analysis and Employment Planning Working Paper no. 31 (Geneva, 1989)Google Scholar
Tella, Torcuato Di contrasts Argentina and Chile in the 1950s: ‘Estratificación social e inestabilidad politíca en Argentina y Chile’, Sixth Conference of the Instituto de Desarrollo Económico y Social (Buenos Aires, 1962).Google Scholar
Tella, Di TorcuatoLa Teoria del Primer Impacto del Crecimiento Económico (Santa Fe, Argentina, n.d. [c. 1965]).Google Scholar
Tokman, Victor points out that this distinction was a continuum rather than a sharp break: ‘The Informal Sector in Latin America: from underground to legality’, in Standing, Guy and Tokman, Victor (eds), Towards Social Adjustment: Labor Market Issues in Structural Adjustment (Geneva, 1991).Google Scholar
Tokman, VictorEl sector informal: quince anos despues,’ El Trimastre Económico, 215 (1987)Google Scholar
,UNCTAD, Export processing free zones in developing countries: implication for trade and industrialization policies, Documento TD/B/C.2/211 (1983)
Vellinga, MennoEconomic Development and the Dynamics of Class: Industrialization, Power, and Control in Monterrey, Mexico (Assen, 1979).Google Scholar
Verduzco, Economía informal y empleo: una visión hacia la provincia Mexicana’, Gustavo, México en el umbral del milenio (Mexico, D.F., 1990)Google Scholar
Verduzco, Gustavo accounts of the social history of Zamora from the late nineteenth century to the 1980s: ‘Trayectoria histórica del dearrollo urbano y regional en una zona del occidental de México’, Gustavo, Estudios Demograficos y Urbanos 1, 3 (September–December 1986)Google Scholar
Verduzco, Zamora (Mexico, Gustavo D.F., 1992).Google Scholar
Wainerman, Catalina and Lattes, Zulma Recchini, El trabajo feminino en el banquillo de los acusados: la medición censal en América Latina (Mexico, D. F., 1981).Google Scholar
Walton, JohnElites and economic Development: Comparative Studies on the Political Economy of Latin American Cities (Austin, Tex., 1977).Google Scholar
Ward, PeterMexico City: the Production and Reproduction of an Urban Environment (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Whiteford, Andrew HunterTwo Cities of Latin America: a Comparative Description of Social Classes (Garden City, N.Y., 1964)Google Scholar
Whiteford, Andrew HunterAn Andean City at Mid-century: a Traditional Urban Society (East Lansing, Mich., 1977).Google Scholar
Winn, Peter reports this as happening in the Yarur textile enterprise after 1954: Weavers of Revolution: Yarur Workers and the Chilean Road to Socialism (New York, 1986)Google Scholar
Wood, Charles H. and Carvalho, José, The Demography of Inequality in Brazil (Cambridge, 1988)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yujnovsky, OscarUrban Spatial Configuration and Land Use Policies in Latin America’, in Portes, Alejandro and Harley, L. Browning (eds), Current Perspectives in Latin American Research (Austin, Tex., 1976).Google Scholar
Zapata, F.El empleo estatal en México’, in Marshall, Adriana (ed.) El Empleo Público frente a la Crisis: Estudios sobre América Latina (Geneva, 1990).Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×