THE TRIPLICITY OF SPACE AND EVERYDAY MOBILITY FOR THE STUDY OF SOCIOSPATIAL FRAGMENTATION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22409/GEOgraphia2021.v23i51.a47518Abstract
This article aims at demonstrating the significance of a large concept of everyday life mobility to study socioespacial fragmentation processes in the urban context. To this end, Lefebvre’s concept of triplicity of space allows us simultaneously to propose a large vision of everyday practices of mobility, from the structures and infrastructures and mobility models, insignificant individual practices, and also articulate itself with the analysis of socio-spatial fragmentation processes. Mobility triggers off fragmentation, alienation and exclusion, but can also act as a form of resistance against hegemonical power. Based on a set of data collected and on experiences and researches conducted over the last ten years in mobility field, the current article will mainly approach the Brazilian context to support our principal argument.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY AND TRANSFER OF COPYRIGHT
I declare that this article is original, having not been submitted for publication in any other national or international journal, either in part or in its entirety. I further declare that, once published in the journal GEOgraphia, edited by the Graduate Program in Geography of the Universidade Federal Fluminense, it shall never be submitted by me or by any of the other co-authors to any other journal. I also declare that I am aware that failure to observe this commitment will subject the offender to the sanctions and penalties set forth in the Copyright Protection Law (No. 9609, of 02/19/1998).
The author grants and transfers, fully and free of charge, to the Graduate Program in Geography of the Universidade Federal Fluminense, on a permanent, irrevocable, and non-exclusive basis, all non-commercial patrimonial copyright relating to scientific articles published in the journal GEOgraphia. Signed texts are the sole responsibility of their authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the editors or members of the journal's Editorial Board.
Published works are simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.