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Maps Show Racial Segregation in Rio de Janeiro _ RioOnWatch
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November 12, 2015 in #GentrificationWatch // Maps Show Racial Segregation in Rio de JaneiroNovember 11, 2015 in Book Reviews // Paying Homage to Favela Author Carolina Maria de JesusNovember 10, 2015 in #UPPWatch // Controversial Rant Sums Up Anger Generated by PoliceViolence in RioNovember 7, 2015 in #EvictionsWatch // Is There Room for Ping Pong and the Olympics? SOSVila Autódromo: Public Spaces Under AttackNovember 5, 2015 in by International Observers // Rio de Janeiro Holds Its First Zero Waste Week
Home » #GentrificationWatch » Maps Show Racial Segregation in Rio de Janeiro
Maps Show Racial Segregation in Rio de Janeiro
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A new series of maps and infographics show the stark racial segregation of the city of Rio de Janeiro.São Paulo geography student Hugo Nicolau Barbosa de Gusmão developed the maps after seeing thedetailed maps of racial segregation in US cities and couldn’t find any similar illustration of race andgeography in Brazilian cities. Using data from the latest 2010 census, Barbosa first mapped racialdistribution in the South Zone and was featured in The Global Post. Last week he published maps whichdetail the racial distribution across the whole city region, illustrating the racial divide which marks thecity.
Published on Barbosa’s blog Desigualdades Espaciais (Spacial Inequalities), the maps show thedistribution of three racial categories: whites are mapped in blue; pardos – the Brazilian term for brown
or mixed race – are shown in green; blacks are shown in red.
Though caucasians are spread out across the city, there is an intense concentration in the affluent,beachside South Zone neighborhoods. Barbosa found that the South Zone is 80% white; Rio’s richestneighborhood Lagoa is 90% white. This contrasts starkly with the racial profile of the city as a whole,which is 50% black or mixed-race.
The distribution of brown or mixed race people is spread across the poorer North and West Zones:
The distribution of blacks is largely in the North and West Zones, with points of concentration across thecity which can be identified as favelas:
In his post on the South Zone maps, Barbosa wrote: “We can see from the maps that blacks and brownsare concentrated in small areas which are mostly favelas while the distribution of whites is uniform andoccupies the whole territory. From this we can understand the Rio de Janeiro government’s [recent]policy of stopping blacks and mixed-race youth going to beach as one to maintain the racial segregationthat already exists in Rio de Janeiro.”
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The maps provide a compelling visual representation of the racial inequalities that exist in the city. Theconcentration of whites in rich areas and blacks in poor areas point to the continuation of a long historyof racial segregation which has roots in Rio’s brutal history of slavery. The criminalization of poor,black, favela residents, evidenced by the recent policy of stopping black youth from the North Zonevisiting the beach and bus changes limiting North and West Zone access to the South Zone, cements thespatial inequalities and exclusion experienced by the city’s black and mixed-race population. The mapsof the racial distribution of the city give a clear picture of how race and geography are interlinked in Rio.
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This article was written by Felicity Clarke, and published on November 12, 2015. in #GentrificationWatch, *Highlight, Policies, Research & Analysis, Understanding Rio, Violations
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In May 2010, Catalytic Communities launched Rio Olympics Neighborhood Watch (RioOnWatch), aprogram to bring visibility to favela community voices in the lead-up to the 2016 Rio Olympics. Thisnews site, RioOnWatch.org, is our primary vehicle for publishing the perspectives of communityorganizers, residents, and international observers, in light of the fast-paced urban transformations thatcurrently characterize Rio. The RioOnWatch program works to grow the participation of communityjournalists in reporting on Rio’s transformations. The program also dialogues with the mainstream andalternative press to engender a more accurate picture of favelas, their contributions to the city, andresident perspectives.
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HomeHighlighted Stories
CommunitiesCentralSouth ZoneNorth ZoneWest ZoneGreater Rio
PoliciesPublic SecurityMega-EventsHousingTransportEducationHealthSanitationPublic WorksSolutions
ViolationsHuman RightsUrban ViolenceHousing RightsPolice Brutality
OrganizingCommunity OrganizingSustainabilityParticipationCommunity SolutionCultureResistanceProtest
Understanding RioContent Map
by Community Contributorsby Int’l ObserversResearch & Analysis
OpinionPhoto-EssaysVideo StoriesInterviews/ProfilesTranslated ArticlesEvent ReportsBook ReviewsFilm Reviews
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