From Inclusive Informality to Alienating Inclusion: The Rise of Mexico’s Debtfare Society on the Urban Fringes of Guadalajara

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY
Inés Escobar González
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article ethnographically traces the social transformation brought about by Mexico’s 2001 housing reform to argue that financial inclusion restructured Mexican society and conditioned a shift away from a social order of inclusive informality to one defined by alienating inclusion. Financial inclusion upended the social arrangements that underpinned Mexico’s old urban periphery, which exhibited high levels of social cohesion and strong horizontal relations based on reciprocity and trust. As the reform unleashed mortgage finance to erect vast, peripheral housing complexes and make formal homeowners out of Mexico’s urban poor, the households inhabiting these new urban worlds came to experiment with, and ultimately depend on, consumer credit finance to sustain themselves. The “debtfare” society that matured with the financial inclusion of Mexico’s urban poor is now marked by atomization, social isolation, and uncertainty as the beneficiaries of Mexico’s housing reform adapt and respond to their incorporation into global financial flows.
从包容的非正式到疏远的包容:瓜达拉哈拉城市边缘墨西哥债务社会的兴起
这篇文章从种族学角度追溯了墨西哥2001年住房改革带来的社会变革,认为金融包容性重组了墨西哥社会,并使其从包容性的非正规社会秩序转变为疏远包容性的社会秩序。金融包容性颠覆了支撑墨西哥旧城市边缘的社会安排,旧城市边缘表现出高度的社会凝聚力和基于互惠和信任的强大横向关系。随着改革释放了抵押贷款融资,以建立庞大的外围住房综合体,并使墨西哥城市穷人成为正式的房主,居住在这些新城市世界的家庭开始尝试并最终依赖消费信贷融资来维持生计。随着墨西哥城市穷人的金融包容性而成熟的“债务家庭”社会,随着墨西哥住房改革的受益者适应并应对其融入全球金融流动,现在呈现出原子化、社会孤立和不确定性的特点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
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8
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