Geoforum
Volume 22, Issue 3, 1991, Pages 237-253
Gender, migration and urban development in Costa Rica: the case of Guanacaste (Article)
Chant S.*
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a
Department of Geography, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE, United Kingdom
Abstract
This paper explores the reasons for urban growth in a peripheral region of Central America: Guanacaste province, north-west Costa Rica. While one of the major factors responsible for urbanisation in other parts of Latin America has been the expansion of economic activities in urban areas, the continued dominance of rural employment among the poor in Guanacasteco towns and high rates of seasonal out-migration to labour markets elsewhere in the country suggest that other factors may be more important. On the basis of an in-depth survey of 350 low-income households in three towns in the province, Liberia, Canas, and Santa Cruz, this paper finds that rural-urban movement in Guanacaste is much more strongly linked to the reproductive (e.g. housing, welfare) needs of household survival, than productive (e.g. employment, income) imperatives. The spatial divisions of labour which arise between household members in these different aspects of survival closely correspond with gender divisions of labour: men form the bulk of seasonal labour migrants, while women tend to remain behind in the towns to manage domestic work and child-care. This paper is concerned to explore the reasons for these associations, and their implications for women. In highlighting the importance of taking gender into account to explain the increasingly differentiated nature of urban growth in Latin America, this paper also stresses the need to examine in greater depth the factors contributing to current patterns of gender-selective migration in the continent. © 1991.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0026266246&doi=10.1016%2f0016-7185%2891%2990010-N&partnerID=40&md5=070f59e23a704e78982665a996d95c6c
DOI: 10.1016/0016-7185(91)90010-N
ISSN: 00167185
Cited by: 23
Original Language: English