Thursday, January 9, 2020

Analysis Of Rio De Janeiro s Most Infamous Favela

Rochina. This is the name of Rio de Janeiro’s most infamous favela, where you have to â€Å"pay the cops to arrest criminals.† Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is the second most populous city in Brazil and the sixth largest city in America; the city is known for holding hundreds of favelas where low-income residents reside. According to the findings of a 2010 census, about 22% of 6 million residents live in the favelas of Brazil (Hurrell).These favelas are known for their brutality and crime rate among the residents. The quality of life in the Brazilian favelas has in a way improved and also worsened. As Brazil is set to hold the Summer Olympic Games this year in 2016, the government has been intervening with the history of Rio’s violent crime†¦show more content†¦From the formation of these slums, the government never paid much attention to the welfare of these residents. The members of these favelas began to work together to provide medical care, method s of transportation and other necessities to one another. They lived in silence in the first half of the twentieth century until they began to attract political attention near the second half of the twentieth century. Due to the favelas being located near Rio’s most affluent neighborhoods, the Brazilian government attempted to eradicate the favelas. However, they failed to address the root causes of Rio’s poverty-stricken areas and the favela population maintained their expansion unwaveringly through the 1950’s, 60’s and 70’s. The government lost hope in the evacuation of the favelas and abandoned their endeavor in the late 1970s. In the 1980s, as the Brazilian government began to abandon military rule and establish democracy, Brazil became the core of the international trade of illegal drugs. The vast change in Brazil’s market due to drugs is elucidated in this quotation, â€Å"By 1985, not only had Rio de Janeiro become the country’s most important export node for drugs from the Andean regions to the United States and Europe, it had developed a sizeable local consumer market for cocaine that had been virtually non-existent in prior years.† The drug merchandise dominated by the numerous hoods in the favelas was also portrayed in the movie

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