We investigate urban segregation in its multiple and changing forms, moving beyond conventional residential measures to examine how segregation is produced, experienced, and encoded across space.
This axis includes pioneering work, developed since 1999, on the experienced segregation of daily trajectories and mobilities across different cities and world regions. It also explores how street networks mediate segregation through relational location and topological distance between social groups.
At the residential scale, we examine the multiscalar nature of segregation, including micro-segregation in horizontal and vertical patterns, and the association between built-form entropy and the clustering of social groups. We also investigate territorial dynamics in contested urban spaces, using real-time grounded approaches to understand how conflict, occupation, and everyday practices reshape urban life.
3.1. Segregation mediated by street networks and relational location
3.2. Segregation in mobility networks
3.3. Residential segregation, urban form and territorial dynamics across scales