The complex nature of urban space within Latin America’s major cities limits the applicability
of many empirical measures of segregation. However, the development of integrated
spatial measures allows for the measurement of highly localised patterns of segregation
between multiple groups across multiple dimensions. This paper presents a methodology
for integrating spatial analysis and GIS tools as an explicit part of investigating the nature
and patterns urban segregation. Using Lima, Peru and an example, the related processes
of segregation and fragmentation are unpacked across multiple social dimensions
and spatial scales. Additionally, this paper empirically tests the theoretical proposition that
social groups in Latin America are becoming increasingly fragmented rather than segregated.