El ‘efecto barrio’ en la inmovilidad residencial en Granada

Autores/as

  • Isabel Palomares-Linares Universidad de Granada
  • Nayla Fuster Universidad de Granada
  • Joaquín Susino Arbucias Universidad de Granada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12795/anduli.2018.i17.02

Palabras clave:

inmovilidad residencial, duración sedentarismo, barrio, estructura socioespacial, redes sociales

Resumen

En el desarrollo urbano, la movilidad de la población siempre ha jugado un papel esencial. Pero la inmovilidad residencial, ya sea libremente elegida o impuesta, también debe ser tenida en cuenta en los procesos de reconfiguración social urbana. Por ello, aunque el interés académico se ha centrado en la movilidad, en este trabajo indagamos en el sedentarismo residencial urbano. Nos interesa saber en qué medida las trayectorias de inmovilidad están influenciadas por las características sociales del barrio así como por los lazos sociales que establecemos en el mismo. Con microdatos de una encuesta del área metropolitana de Granada de 2008 y mediante modelos de regresión, nuestros resultados indican que residir en zonas deprimidas aumenta las probabilidades de permanecer allí por más tiempo. La presencia de redes sociales es también un potente conductor de las historias de sedentarismo, señalando la relevancia de este tipo de factores a la hora de entender cómo se fraguan pautas de reproducción socioespacial urbana.

Descargas

Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.

Métricas

Cargando métricas ...

Biografía del autor/a

Isabel Palomares-Linares, Universidad de Granada

Departamento de Sociología

Nayla Fuster, Universidad de Granada

Departamento de Sociología

Joaquín Susino Arbucias, Universidad de Granada

Departamento de Sociología

Citas

Ajzen, I., & Fishbein, M. (1970). The prediction of behavior from attitudinal and normative variables. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 6,466-487.

Ajzen, I. (1991). The theory of planned behavior. Organizational behavior and human decision processes, 50(2), 179-211.

Apaolaza, J.M. & Cabello, J. (1991). Un modelo teórico-metodológico para el estudio de la marginación en el Polígono de la Cartuja. Gaceta de Antropología [en línea], 8. Disponible en: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/13677 (Última consulta: 3 de junio de 2012).

Arango, J. (2000). Explaining Migration: A Critical View. International Social Science Journal, 52, 283-296.

Baum, C. F., Schaffer, M. E. & Stillman, S. (2003). Instrumental variables and GMM: Estimation and testing. Stata Journal, 3, 1–31.

Becker, G. (1976). The economic approach to human behavior. Chicago: University of ChicagoPress.

Bettin, G. (1982). Los sociólogos de la ciudad. Barcelona: Gustavo Gili.

Cameron, C.A. & Trivedi, P. K. (2013). Regression Analysis of Count Data. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Clark, W.A.V. (2013). Life Course Events and Residential Change: Unpacking Age Effects on the Probability of Moving. Journal of Population Research, 30(4), 319-334. doi:10.1007/s12546-013-9116-y.

Clark, W.A.V. & Dieleman, F.M. (1996). Households and housing. New Jersey: Center for Urban Policy Research, New Brunswick.

Clark, W.A.V., Duque-Calvache, R. & Palomares-Linares, I. (2015). Place attachment and the decision to stay in the neighbourhood. Population Space and Place, doi: 10.1002/psp.2001.

Clark, W.A.V. & Lisowski, W. (2017). Decisions to move and decisions to stay: Life course events and mobility outcomes. Housing Studies, 32(5), 547-565. doi: 10.1080/02673037.2016.1210100.

Cooke, T.J., Mulder, C.H., & Thomas, M. (2016). Union dissolution and migration. Demographic Research, 34, 741.

Coulter, R. (2013). Wishful thinking and the abandonment of moving desires over the life course. Environment and Planning A, 45(8), 1944-1962.

Coulter, R. & Van Ham, M. (2013). Following people through time: An analysis of Klindividual residential mobility biographies. Housing Studies, 28(7), 1037-1055. doi: 10.1080/02673037.2013.783903.

Coulter, R., Van Ham, M. & Findlay, A.M. (2016). Re-thinking residential mobility: Linking lives through time and space. Progress in Human Geography, 40(3), 352-374, doi: 10.1177/0309132515575417.

Courchene, T.J. (1970). Interprovincial migration and economic adjustment. Canadian J Economics, 3, 551-576.

Chen, Y. & Rosenthal, S.S. (2008). Local amenities and life-cycle migration: Do people move for jobs or fun?, Journal of Urban Economics, 64(3), 519-537.

Chevan, A. (1971). Family growth, household density, and moving. Demography, 8, 451-458. doi: 10.2307/2060682.

DaVanzo, J. (1981). Repeat migration, information costs, and location-specific capital. Population and Environment, 4(1), 45-73.doi: 10.1007/BF01362575.

Dawkins, C.J. (2006). Are social networks the ties that bind families to neighborhoods?. Housing Studies, 21, 867-888.doi: 10.1080/02673030600917776.

De Pablos, J.C. & Susino, J. (2010). Vida Urbana: entre la desigualdad social y los espacios del habitar. Anduli, 9, 119-142.

Dieleman, F.M. (2001). Modelling Residential Mobility; a Review of Recent Trends in Research. Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 16 (3), 249-265. doi: 10.1023/A:1012515709292.

Duque-Calvache, R. (2017). Procesos de gentrificación en cascos antiguos: el Albaicín de Granada. Madrid: Editorial CIS

Elder, G.H. (1985). Life course dynamics: trajectories and transitions, 1968-1980. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

Feijten P., Hooimeijer P. & Mulder, C.H. (2008). Residential experience and residential environment choice over the life-course. Urban Studies, 45, 141-62.

Feria, J.M. & Susino, J. (2005). Movilidad por razón de trabajo en Andalucía, 2001.Sevilla: Instituto de Estadística de Andalucía.

Feria, J.M. (2008). Un ensayo metodológico de definición de las áreas metropolitanas en España a partir de la variable residencia-trabajo. Investigaciones Geográficas. XIII, 46, 49-68.

Fischer, P.A. & Malmberg, G. (2001). Settled people don’t move: on life course and (im-)mobility in Sweden. International Journal of Population Geography, 7, 357-371.doi: 10.1002/ijpg.230.

Fuster, N., Arundel, R. & Susino, J. (2018). From a culture of homeownership to generation rent: housing discourses of young adults in Spain. Journal of Youth Studies. doi: 10.1080/13676261.2018.1523540

Graves, P.E. (1976). A Reexamination of Migration, Economic Opportunity and the Quality of Life. Journal of Regional Science, 16(1), 107-112.

Greenwood, M.J. (1985). Human Migration: Theory, Models and Empirical Studies. Journal of Regional Science, 25, 521-44.

Hedman, L. (2013). Moving near Family? The Influence of extended family on neighbourhood choice in an intra‐urban context. Population, Space and Place, 19(1), 32-45.

Hedman L., Manley D., van Ham M. & Östh J. (2015) Cumulative exposure to disadvantage and the intergenerational transmission of neighbourhood effects. Journal of Economic Geograph, 15(1), 195-215.

Helderman, A., Mulder, C.H. & Van Ham, M. (2004). The changing effect of home ownership on residential mobility in the Netherlands, 1980–98. Housing Studies, 19, 601-616. doi: 10.1080/0267303042000221981.

Henderson, V. J. & Ioannides, Y. M. (1989).Dynamic aspects of consumer decisions in housingmarkets. Journal of Urban Economics, 26, 212-230

Henley, A. (1998). Residential mobility, housing equity and the labour market. The Economic Journal, 108(447), 414-427.

Hidalgo M.C. & Hernández, B. (2001). Place attachment: conceptual and empirical questions. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 21, 273-281.

Hiscock, R., Kearns, A., Macintyre, S. & Ellaway, A. (2001). Ontological security and psycho-social benefits from the home: Qualitative evidence on issues of tenure. Housing, Theory and Society, 18, 50-66. doi: 10.1080/14036090120617.

Kan, K. (1999). Expected and unexpected residential mobility. Journal of Urban Economics, 45(1), 72-96. doi: 10.1006/juec.1998.2082.

Kan, K. (2007). Residential mobility and social capital. Journal of Urban Economics, 61(3), 436-457. doi: 10.1016/j.jue.2006.07.005.

Kiel, K. (1994).The impact of housing price appreciation on household mobility. Journal of Housing Economics, 3(2), 92-108.

King, R. (2012). Geography and migration studies: retrospect and prospect. Population, Space and Place, 18 134–153.

Kleinepier M. & van Ham M. (2017) The Temporal Stability of Children’s Neighborhood Experiences: A Follow-up From Birth to Age 15. Demographic Research, 36(59), 1813-1826.

Kley, S. & Mulder, C. (2010). Considering, planning, and realizing migration in early adulthood. The influence of life-course events and perceived opportunities on leaving the city in Germany. Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 25, 73-94.

Landale, N.S. & Guest, A.M. (1985). Constraints, satisfaction and residential mobility: Speare's model reconsidered. Demography, 22, 199-222.

Leal, J. (coord.) (2010). La política de vivienda en España. Madrid: Editorial Pablo Iglesias.

Lennartz, C., Arundel, R., & Ronald, R. (2016). Younger adults and homeownership in Europe through the global financial crisis. Population, Space and Place, 22(8), 823-835.

Lewicka, M. (2011). Place attachment: How far have we come in the last 40 years. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 31(3), 207-230.

Litwak, E. & Szelenyi, J. (1969). Primary group structures and their functions: kin, neighbors, and friends. American Sociological Review, 34, 465-481.

Long, L. (1991). Residential mobility differences among developed countries. International Regional Science Review, 14(2), 133-147. doi: 10.1177/016001769101400202.

McHugh, K., Gober, P. & Reid, N. (1990). Determinants of Short and Long Term Mobility Expectations for Homeowners and Renters. Demography 27(1), 81-95.

McHugh, K. (1984). Explaining migration intentions and destination selection, Professional. Geographer, 36(3), 315-325

Meeus, B. & De Decker, P. (2015). Staying Put! A Housing Pathway Analysis of Residential Stability in Belgium. Housing Studies, 30(7), 1116-1134. doi: 10.1080/02673037.2015.1008424.

Módenes, J.A. (2006). Una visión demográfica de la movilidad residencial reciente en España. Papers de Demografía, [en línea], 317. Disponible en: http://www.ced.uab.es/publicacions/PapersPDF/Text292.pdf. [Consulta: 2012, 12 de mayo].

Morrison, P.S. & Clark, W.A.V. (2016). Loss aversion and duration of residence. Demographic Research, 35, 1079-1100. doi: 10.4054/DemRes.2016.35.36.

Mulder C.H. (2007). The family context and residential choice: a challenge for new research. Population, Space and Place, 13, 265-278.

Mulder, C.H. (2006). Home-ownership and family formation. Journal of Housing and the Built Environment, 21(3), 281-298. doi: 10.1007/s10901-006-9050-9.

Mulder, C. H. (1993). Migration dynamics: a life course approach. Amsterdam: Thesis Publishers

Mulder, C.H. & Cooke, T.J. (2009). Family ties and residential locations. Population, Space and Place, 15, 299-304. doi: 10.1002/psp.556.

Mulder, C.H. & Hooimeijer, P. (1999). Residential relocations in the life course. En: Van Wissen, L.J.G. & Dykstra, P.A. (Eds.). Population Studies: An Interdisciplinary Focus. Nueva York: Plenum Press, pp. 159-186. doi: 10.1007/978-94-011-4389-9_6.

Niedomysl, T., & Clark, W. A. (2014). What matters for internal migration, jobs or amenities? Migration Letters, 11(3), 377.

Oishi, S. (2010). The Psychology of Residential Mobility: Implications for the Self, Social Relationships, and Well-Being, Perspectives on Psychological Science 5(1), 5-21.

Palomares-Linares, I (2018). Movilidad residencial y sedentarismo en contextos urbanos. Granada: Universidad de Granada [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/49077]

Palomares-Linares, I. y van Ham, M. (2018). Understanding the effects of homeownership and regional unemployment levels on internal migration during the economic crisis in Spain, Regional Studies. doi: 10.1080/00343404.2018.1502420

Palomares-Linares, I. y van Ham, M. (2018). Del sedentarismo a la hipermovilidad: medida y determinantes de las historias de (in)movilidad residencial en contextos urbanos. Papers: revista de sociología, 102(4), 637-671

Pickles, A. & Davies, R. (1985).The longitudinal analysis of housing careers. Journal of Regional Science, 25(1), 85-111.

Pissarides, C. A., & McMaster, I. (1990). Regional migration, wages and unemployment: empirical evidence and implications for policy. Oxford Economic Papers, 42(4), 812-831.

Quigley, J.M. (2002). Transactions Costs and Housing Markets. En O’Sullivan T. & Gibb, K. (eds.), Housing Economics and Public Policy. Oxford: Blackwell Science Ltd, pp.56-66. doi: 10.1002/9780470690680.ch4.

Rainer, H. & Siedler, T. (2012). Family location and caregiving patterns from an international perspective. Population and Development Review, 38(2), 337-351.

Rappaport, J. (2007). Moving to nice weather. Regional Science and Urban Economics, 37(3), 375-398.

Ronald, R. (2008). The ideology of home ownership: Homeowner societies and the role of housing. UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Rossi, P.H. (1955). Why families move: A study in the social psychology of urban residential mobility. New York: Free Press of Glencoe.

Sabagh, G., Van Arsdol, M.D. & Butler, E.W. (1969). Some Determinants of Intrametropolitan Residential Mobility: Conceptual Considerations. Social Forces, 48(1), 88-98. doi: 10.1093/sf/48.1.88.

Sell, R. y DeJong, G. (1983). Deciding whether to move: Mobility, wishful thinking, and adjustment. Sociology and Social Research, 67, 146-165.

Simmons, J. W. (1968). Changing residence in the city: a review of intraurban mobility. Geographical Review, 53, 622-651.

Smits, A. (2010). Moving close to parents and adult children in the Netherlands: the influence of support needs. Demographic Research, 22, 985-1014. doi: 10.4054/DemRes.2010.22.31.

Susino J. & Duque-Calvache, R. (2013). Veinte años de suburbanización en España (1981-2001). El perfil de sus protagonistas. Documents d’Anàlisi Geogràfica 59(2), 265-290.doi: 10.5565/rev/dag.31

Tammaru T., Marcińczak S., Van Ham M. & Musterd S. (eds) (2016) Socio-Economic Segregation in European Capital Cities: East Meets West. Routledge: Oxford.

Thomas, M.J., Stillwell, J.C.H. & Gould, M. (2016). Modelling the duration of residence and plans for future residential relocation: a multilevel analysis. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 41(3), 297-312. doi: 10.1111/tran.12123.

Van Ham, M. & Feijten, P. (2008). Who wants to leave the neighbourhood? The effects of being different from the neighbourhood population on wishes to move. Environment and Planning A, 40(5), 1151-1170.

Van Ham, M., Hedman, L., Manley, D., Coulter, R. & Östh, J. (2014). Intergenerational transmission of neighbourhood poverty: an analysis of neighbourhood histories of individuals. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 39, 402-417. doi: 10.1111/tran.12040.

Van Ham, M., Manley, D., Bailey, N., Simpson, L. & Maclennan, D. (Eds.) (2013) Understanding Neighbourhood Dynamics. Dordrecht: Springer.

Vidal, T., Berroeta, H., de Masso, A., Valera, S., & Peró, M. (2013). Apego al lugar, identidad de lugar, sentido de comunidad y participación en un contexto de renovación urbana. Estudios de psicología, 34(3), 275-286.

Wolpert, J. (1965). Behavioral Aspects of the Decision to Migrate. Papers of the Regional Science Association, 15, 159-169.

Descargas

Publicado

2018-12-15

Cómo citar

Palomares-Linares, I., Fuster, N., & Susino Arbucias, J. (2018). El ‘efecto barrio’ en la inmovilidad residencial en Granada. ANDULI. Revista Andaluza De Ciencias Sociales, (17), 23–46. https://doi.org/10.12795/anduli.2018.i17.02
Visualizaciones
  • Resumen 265
  • PDF 137