1st Edition

Worker Mobility and Urban Policy in Latin America Policy Interactions and Urban Outcomes in Mexico City

By David López-García Copyright 2023
    144 Pages 26 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    144 Pages 26 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book argues that urban outcomes are better understood as the result of the interactions between policies from distinct policy domains rather than from any single policy silo. In doing so, the book develops and applies the Policy Interactions Framework to the study of the mobility experience of workers in Greater Mexico City.

    Four empirical studies provide the reader with a comprehensive view of how urban policies can sometimes interact at cross-purposes to produce inequitable urban outcomes. The chapters analyze time and distance in the journey to work to quantify and map commuting inequalities, assess the shift in the spatial location of the demand for labor between 1999 and 2019, examine the default housing pathways available for workers, and evaluate the spatial distribution of public and common mobility resources. An outcome of applying the Policy Interactions Framework to the study of workers’ mobility is to put forward the choiceless mobility hypothesis: a process by which the interaction between the spatial location of the demand for labor, the housing pathways available for workers, and the political economy of public transport operates to produce geographies of low accessibility to jobs.

    The audience of this book consists of scholars and practitioners in the field of urban policy analysis, urban development, and urban political economy in the Global South.

    Acknowledgments

    Chapter 1. Introduction

    Chapter 2. The Policy Interactions Framework 

    Chapter 3. Diverging mobility situations of workers in Greater Mexico City

    Chapter 4. Shifts in the spatial location of the demand for labor, 1999–2019 

    Chapter 5. Housing pathways and the mobility experience of workers

    Chapter 6. The spatial distribution of public and common mobility resources 

    Chapter 7. Conclusion: policy interactions and the choiceless mobility hypothesis

    Annex

    Postscript: researching the mobility experience of workers amid the COVID-19 pandemic

    Index

    Biography

    David López-García is a postdoctoral research associate in the Department of Urban Planning and Policy in the University of Illinois at Chicago, IL, USA.