The article explores cartographic and statistical registers of poverty as geo-legal technologies operating across shifting visual economies which structure ways of seeing and concealing ‘the poor’ in the urban landscape. Drawing on the fields of critical cartography and digital urbanism, and taking a 2013 controversy around Google Maps’ mapping of favelas in Rio de Janeiro as a starting point, it investigates the aesthetic role of digital maps and data in the legal geographies of urban poverty. It is argued that sociospatial encodings give form to poverty in ways that activate antipoverty responses and continuously support correlations between poverty and criminality. This argument entails a post-representational approach to maps considering their inscriptional, propositional and normative functions. Cartography, statistics and law are interrogated as devices of global governance that work aesthetically to shape poverty and its modes of appearance in the city, i.e., as productive methods of documentation as well as world-making, through which geocodings simultaneously create images of poverty and become functional of spatial transformations. Poverty is thus conceptualized as it is made into an aesthetic category subjected to continuous geo-legal modulations.
Cartographies of poverty: Rethinking statistics, aesthetics and the law
Tipo de Material
Artigo de Periódico
Autor Principal
Ansari, Moniza Rizzini
Sexo
Mulher
Código de Publicação (ISSN)
1472-3433
Código de Publicação (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1177/02637758221075350
Título do periódico
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Volume
40
Ano de Publicação
2022
Local da Publicação
Londres
Página Inicial
567
Página Final
585
Idioma
Inglês
Palavras chave
Poverty
aesthetics
cartography
statistics
Google Maps
Resumo
Disciplina
Método e Técnica de Pesquisa
Métodos mistos
Área Temática
Referência Espacial
Cidade/Município
Rio de Janeiro
Macrorregião
Sudeste
Brasil
Habilitado
UF
Rio de Janeiro
Referência Temporal
2010-2014
Localização Eletrônica
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02637758221075350