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Social Geography of Laredo, Texas, Neighborhoods

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... Laredo, Texas, Neighborhoods ... boom more than 1500 homes each year. Economically active population ... from Mexico and new wave of immigrants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Geography of Laredo, Texas, Neighborhoods


1
Social Geography of Laredo, Texas, Neighborhoods
  • Distinctiveness and Diversity in a
    majority-Hispanic place
  • Alex Behles. IAFF 190. April 13, 2005

2
Why Laredo?
  • Historically Hispanic city
  • Hispanics have been dominant politically and
    socially for three centuries, dictating the
    social geography of the city and surrounding
    rural hinterland
  • Historical isolation from other population
    centers in Texas and Mexico

3
A Little History
  • 1757 population of 60 managed 10,000 livestock
    porciones and landless labor
  • 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo made Laredo an
    American town
  • Nuevo Laredo foundedgt Los Dos
  • 1881 rail traffic increases both role and
    importance of binational trade

4
Infrastructure
  • Trade inspired improvements to transportation
    infrastructure in Laredo
  • Two international bridges _at_ Laredo oriented
    towards truck traffic
  • Highway 85 is the only four-lane highway from
    Mexicos capital to the US border
  • Laredo is the southern terminus of the US
    interstate 35
  • Texas Mexican Railway Co. provides retail service
    from the two Laredos into Mexico and to the port
    of Corpus Cristi, Texas
  • Union Pacific Railway provides freight service
    between Laredo and the upper Midwest

5
Economy
  • High land costs in Laredo make maquiladoras less
    important than in other border towns
  • Business-government alliance emphasizes the
    port-function of the city
  • Alliance promotes economic development at the
    expense of taxpayers
  • Warehouses dominate land use
  • Border retailing employs largest workforce in
    Laredo

6
Life in Laredo
  • High birthrate, influx immigrants, law officials
  • Construction boomgt more than 1500 homes each year
  • Economically active population of 75,000
  • High unemployment rates
  • Average weekly wage of 439
  • Unemployment rate of 8 in 2000 was higher than
    national and state averages, but lower than that
    of other metropolitan border communities
  • Cost of living was the highest in Texas fifth
    highest in the U.S. at the end of 1998 (adjusted
    for median household incomes)

7
A Unique Division
  • Many Laredos identify with the particular place
    they occupy
  • South working class barrios and low income
    subdivisions
  • North middle and upper middle class subdivisions
    and fast-paced automobile-oriented commercial
    land uses that typify mainstream North American
    suburban style
  • 1998 mean household income of all inner city
    barrios was less than 20,000upper middle class
    on the north side averaged over 40,000,
    sometimes 50,000

8
Real Estate
  • Nearly all office space outside of the central
    business district is scattered throughout North
    Laredo
  • Mall del Norte, primary retail and entertainment
    hub
  • Franchise restaurants and motels line the freeway
    access roads from the mall
  • Contrasted with pawnshops, automobile parts
    stores, and fast food restaurants in the South

9
El Azteca
  • Oldest surviving barrio
  • First generation immigrants from Mexico and new
    wave of immigrants
  • Near downtown Laredo, convenient for smugglers
    importing drugs and illegal immigrants
  • Surrounded by The Heights and St. Peters Anglo
    neighborhoods that are historically more appealing

10
The Heights
  • Victorian architecture, prairie-style homes
  • Few Spanish surnames among the list of residents
  • From mobile homes to mansions
  • Greatest variety of homes and market values

11
Colonias
  • Rural subdivisions created on unused ranchland by
    landowners seeking a means to generate capital
  • Remote lack of basic services
  • High unemployment
  • Difficult to transport to jobs
  • Forgoing of education due to the time involved in
    commuting to low-paying jobs in Laredo
  • Lack of on-the-job training
  • Low-density populations and spread outgt unlikely
    that maquiladoras will appear already present in
    Nuevo Laredo

12
Unified
  • Carnes asadas- cookouts involving extended
    families
  • Palapa- gazebo-type structure where meat is
    grilled
  • Norteno styles of music

13
Laredo An Exception
  • In contrast to other major Hispanic places
    throughout the U.S., the social disparities that
    exist in Laredo are not racial or Ethnic in
    nature
  • Del Mar, 91 Hispanic The Heights, 93 El
    Azteca, 95 Santo Nino, 96 (U.S. Bureau of the
    Census 2000)
  • Socioeconomic divide between the North and South
    exists as a result of land use, planning and
    zoning

14
The End
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