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City profile: Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Highlights ► I examine the history of planned and unplanned urban growth in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. ► Santa Cruz’s economy grew rapidly after Bolivia’s 1952 national revolution. ► The Techint Plan of 1960 provided a framework for the city’s expansion. ► Techint’s idealized model of urbanism overlooked mass in-migration since the 1980s. ► Intercultural tensions are currently reflected in disputes over public space.
Abstract Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia has in the past half century transformed from an isolated frontier town to the center of the country’s agro-industrial production zone. By the 1990s, Santa Cruz (as the city is often abbreviated) had largely overtaken La Paz as Bolivia’s financial capital and most important economic pole, and its political influence is growing. Regional economic growth in eastern Bolivia has attracted—and resulted from—labor migration from poorer Andean regions over the past four decades. Santa Cruz is also the flashpoint of a regionalist movement, expressed in claims for ‘departmental autonomy’ as a means for regional governments to play a greater role in public decision-making, a campaign supported by the recent intensification of place-based identity politics. This profile examines the history and dynamics of planned and unplanned urban growth in Santa Cruz. I examine modernist planning initiatives in the 1960s and early 1970s and suggest these efforts overlooked the needs created by large-scale migration and rapid urban growth since the 1980s. Against this background, I consider recent patterns of spatial segregation, social inequality, intercultural tensions and conflicts over public space.
City profile: Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Highlights ► I examine the history of planned and unplanned urban growth in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. ► Santa Cruz’s economy grew rapidly after Bolivia’s 1952 national revolution. ► The Techint Plan of 1960 provided a framework for the city’s expansion. ► Techint’s idealized model of urbanism overlooked mass in-migration since the 1980s. ► Intercultural tensions are currently reflected in disputes over public space.
Abstract Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia has in the past half century transformed from an isolated frontier town to the center of the country’s agro-industrial production zone. By the 1990s, Santa Cruz (as the city is often abbreviated) had largely overtaken La Paz as Bolivia’s financial capital and most important economic pole, and its political influence is growing. Regional economic growth in eastern Bolivia has attracted—and resulted from—labor migration from poorer Andean regions over the past four decades. Santa Cruz is also the flashpoint of a regionalist movement, expressed in claims for ‘departmental autonomy’ as a means for regional governments to play a greater role in public decision-making, a campaign supported by the recent intensification of place-based identity politics. This profile examines the history and dynamics of planned and unplanned urban growth in Santa Cruz. I examine modernist planning initiatives in the 1960s and early 1970s and suggest these efforts overlooked the needs created by large-scale migration and rapid urban growth since the 1980s. Against this background, I consider recent patterns of spatial segregation, social inequality, intercultural tensions and conflicts over public space.
City profile: Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Kirshner, Joshua D. (author)
Cities ; 31 ; 544-552
2011-12-17
9 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
City profile: Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Online Contents | 2013
|City of Santa Cruz, California
NTIS | 1972
Water works of city of Santa Cruz, in Territory of Santa Cruz, Argentina
Engineering Index Backfile | 1942
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