Maps / Mapas

Maps / Mapas

Research Territories / Territorios de Investigación

This map shows the key territories where institutional invisibility concentrates in Bogotá, identified through the three-filter gradient of the Sisbén IV analysis. Interactive data layers will be added as the research progresses.

Este mapa muestra los territorios clave donde se concentra la invisibilidad institucional en Bogotá. Las capas de datos interactivas se irán agregando a medida que avanza la investigación.

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Interactive map coming soon

The institutional invisibility gradient — mapping 1,746,248 households across 44,052 city blocks at three territorial scales — will be visualized here as Phase 1 analysis is completed. Collaborative maps produced with research participants will also be added during Phase 2 fieldwork.

Key Research Territories

These four territories were identified through the spatial analysis of the Sisbén IV invisibility gradient as zones of highest non-recognition concentration — where the accumulation of the three institutional filters is most acute.

Teusaquillo

Stratum 4 zone with high concentration of institutional invisibility. Significant mismatch between Sisbén IV classification and lived economic reality. Mortgage pressure and private education debt are key drivers of hidden precarity.

Los Cedros

Mixed strata territory with documented patterns of non-recognition. Households with formal employment markers but informal underemployment reality. Key fieldwork territory for Phase 2.

Galerías

Sublayer 3b spotlight territory. High mismatch between official Sisbén IV classification and lived experience. Urban walk and collaborative mapping site for participatory fieldwork.

Quinta Paredes

Urban walk territory. Mixed residential and commercial zone with invisible precarity beneath stable-looking facades. Participatory mapping fieldwork site.

Coming soon: Interactive data layers showing the institutional invisibility gradient from Sisbén IV at block, UPZ and locality scale. Collaborative maps produced with research participants during Phase 2 fieldwork will also be published here.