Title: Human%20and%20Social%20Hazards%20in%20Los%20Angeles
1Human and Social Hazards in Los Angeles
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2The United States of America
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3Los Angeles the City of Angels?
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4Los Angeles
- The capital of the 20th century.
- LA has become increasingly important as the world
realises it is facing a Pacific century. - 60 mile city.
- Population c.12 million.
- Gross annual output of c.250 billion.
- LA as a window through which to view rest of the
world.
Source http//www.hellolosangeles.com
5The Growth of LA
- Multi centred region. Five counties LA, Orange,
Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura. - Hard to over emphasis how much LA is growing,
changing, expanding. - Centrality of cars in contemporary cities.
Exacerbating fragmentation, privatisation,
segregation. - LAs inhabitants have been energetically,
ceaselessly and sometimes carelessly unrolling
urbanisation over natural landscape for more than
a century. - Uninhibited occupation has engendered its own
range of environmental problems e.g. air
pollution, habitat loss and dangerous encounters
between humans and animals.
6The Economic Restructuring of LA
- 4 elements
- Closures in smokestack manufacturing, during
60s, 70s and 80s. - New jobs created in high tech sectors.
- Increase in sweatshop industries.
- Large scale inward investment in property from
Japanese and overseas Chinese interests. - Contrast between low tech garment industry and
high tech (aerospace) industry a bi polar
economy.
7Changes in World Economy and Impacts on LA
- Shifting world market for labour coupled with
shifting world market for production sites. - Disinvestment and unemployment in one country can
be linked to employment in another nation. - Pockets of affluence created in core cities in
turn generate demand for customised production
and personal services performed by low wage
workers, thereby contributing to uneven
development within growing cities at core. - Sweatshops employ immigrants from Asia, Mexico
and Central America. Availability of illegal
immigrant labour lacking basic right of
citizenship and willing to work for low wages is
a major factor contributing to rise of new
sweatshops and their spatial concentration in
large US core cities.
8Changes in World Economy and Impacts on LA 2
- Number of low paid service jobs has increased
dramatically gt sometimes viewed as a distinct
type of economic restructuring in LA almost a
third world in a first world city. - Corporate centre restructuring often involves
migration of better paid managerial/professional
people to inner city, often to luxury apartments
or gentrified homes, whose construction involves
displacement of middle/low income households. - Government investment is important to economic
health of LA. Defence and aerospace contracts
for huge projects like space shuttle and high
tech weapons systems fuel growth of region. - Perhaps more than any other place, LA is
everywhere. Global in fullest sense of word.
Nowhere, is this more evident than in its
cultural projection and ideological reach.
9- With exquisite irony, contemporary LA has come
to resemble more than ever before a gigantic
agglomeration of theme parks, a life space
comprised of Disneyworld's. It is a realm
divided into showcases of global village cultures
and mimetic American landscapes, all embracing
shopping malls and crafty Main Streets,
corporation sponsored magic kingdoms, high
technology based experimental prototype
communities of tomorrow, attractively packaged
places for rest and recreation all cleverly
hiding the buzzing workstations and labour
processes which help to keep it all together
(Soja, 2000).
10Social Exclusion and the Revolt of the Elite
- Perhaps most heterogeneous city in world.
- Shift in ethnic composition of LA county
population from 70 Anglo in 1970 to 60 non
Anglo in 1990. - Shift from African-American to Latino population.
- LA less a melting pot than NYC. Lots of
different nationalities but tend to live in
ethnic enclaves. - LA police have a reputation for being racist.
11Social Exclusion and the Revolt of the Elite 2
- Obsession with physical security systems and
architectural policing of social boundaries. - We live in fortress cities brutally divided
between the fortified cells of affluent society
and places of terror where the police battle the
criminalised poor (Soja, 2000). - In cities like LA unprecedented tendency to merge
urban design, architecture and police apparatus
into a single, comprehensive security effort. - Market provision of security generates its own
paranoid demand. Security becomes a positional
good defined by income, access to private
protective services and membership in some
hardened residential enclave or restricted
suburb. Security has less to do with personal
safety than with degree of personal insulation
from unsavory groups, individuals and crowds in
general.
12Social Exclusion and the Revolt of the Elite 3
- Fear proves itself social perception of
threat becomes a function of security
mobilisation itself, not crime rates. - Today's pseudo public spaces sumptuary malls,
office centres, cultural acropolises and so on
are full of invisible signs warning off
underclass other. - Universal and inevitable consequence of crusade
to secure city is destruction of accessible
public space. - Fredrick Law Olmstead conceived public spaces and
parks as social safety valves, mixing classes and
ethnicities in common recreations and enjoyments. - Quality of any urban environment can be measured
by whether there are convenient, comfortable
places for pedestrians to sit.
13Social Exclusion and the Revolt of the Elite 4
- Bunker Hill, LAs new Downtown tens of millions
spent on soft environments for office workers
and upscale tourists. In contrast, few blocks
away city is making public facilities and spaces
as unliveable as possible for homeless and
poor. - Skid row outdoor poor house, one of most
dangerous ten blocks in world. - Many homeless try to escape to safer areas but
city tightens noose with increased police
harassment and ingenious design deterrents e.g. - Barrel shaped bus benches, minimal surface for
comfortable sitting while making sleeping
impossible - Outdoor sprinklers
- Ornate enclosures to protect waste
- No public toilets
- LAPD regularly sweep streets, confiscate
cardboard condos
14The 1992 Riots
- Rodney King an African-American who while being
videotaped by a bystander was severely beaten
and arrested by the LAPD during a police traffic
stop in 1991. - Incident raised a public outcry, especially in
African-American community, among people who
believed incident was racially motivated. - Subsequent acquittal in a state court of 4
officers charged with using excessive force in
subduing King led to 1992 LA riots and mass
protest around country.
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15- Left hundreds of buildings severely damaged or
destroyed, caused more than 1 billion worth of
damage, killed 55 people, injured 2383, and led
to arrest of more than 8000 people. - Smaller riots occurred in other U.S. cities.
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16Conclusion
- Fragmented and polarised city.
- Symbolic and high tech industries stand in stark
contrast to industrial firms and Sweatshops that
underpin city. - Highly diverse ethnic mix, but live in segregated
areas. How is empathy and understanding of
difference engendered if it is never or rarely
experienced? - Crime and fear of crime have lead to a culture
of fear. - Physical environment reflects this with a
decreasing amount of public space and an
increasing amount of fortified development. - Problems boil over in re-occurring events such as
the 1992 riots.
17Bibliography
- Dear, M. (2000) The Postmodern Urban Condition.
Oxford Blackwell Publishers. - Dear, M. and Flusty, S (2001) The spaces of
postmodernity readings in human geography.
Malden, MA Blackwell Publishers. - Soja, E. (2000) Postmetropolis Critical Studies
of Cities and Regions. Oxford Blackwell
Publishers.