INVESTIGADORES
MIKKELSEN Claudia Andrea
artículos
Título:
A quantitative-qualitative study on quality of life in smaller towns in the early XXI century in Argentina.
Autor/es:
MIKKELSEN, C
Revista:
Social Inidcators Research Series.
Editorial:
Springer
Referencias:
Lugar: Heilderberg, Dordrecht, New York, London. ; Año: 2016 vol. 62 p. 173 - 199
Resumen:
The consideration of Quality of Life as a category, allows the study of social welfare and individual and social satisfaction in specific socio-cultural contexts. Quality of life is a sensitive, awareness-raising notion which consists of dimensions and indicators that stimulate reflection upon the ways of achieving a life of fulfillment, for it is sensitive to social, cultural, political, and environmental changes. The aim of this work is to provide information on the quality of life of the population residing in smaller towns in the southeastern suburbs of the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, within territorial segments undergoing a combination of various processes: repopulation, depopulation, multi-activity, among others.Its approach requires the use of a quantitative and qualitative methodology, so that the data obtained from primary and secondary sources may account for the phenomena under study. Thus censuses and statistics, such as interviews and direct observations, are used to characterize the quality of life of the residents of smaller towns in the southeast of the province of Buenos Aires. And, though their evolution has been dissimilar, it boils down to an almost universally accepted rule according to which, these population groups have subsided into a state of stagnation and undisputable population decline. In this context, it is interesting to reflect on the presence of places whose dynamics can defy this "truth".The period proposed for the analysis comprises the last decades of the XX century and the early XXI century, the period between 1991 and 2001 being defined as the convertibility period, whereas the years to follow from 2002 to the present time have been identified by specialists as ?neo-development?, in other words, the post-convertibility or post-neoliberal era. After the crisis and devaluation in 2001, the decline of the exchange rate convertibility model led to a new stage known as post-convertibility (Varesi 2011; Schorr 2012). Broadly speaking, it may be asserted that, at this stage, the stimulation of production policies of the 90s was complemented by the consideration of the social dimension, i.e. a greater involvement of the State through the generation of social policies for local governments. In this context, minor towns may attest to the various impacts of different policies through a variety of socio-territorial expressions, such as depopulation, productive diversification and repopulation.