Rocinha is the largest hill favela in Rio de Janeiro. Although favelas are found in urban areas throughout Brazil, many of the more famous ones exist in Rio — a widely photographed city |
A favela (Portuguese pronunciation: [faˈvɛlɐ]) is the term for a shanty town in Brazil,
most often within urban areas. The first favelas appeared in late 19th
century and built by soldiers with nowhere to live. Some of the first
settlements were called bairros africanos (African neighbourhoods). This was the place where former slaves with no land ownership and no options for work lived. Over the years, many former black slaves moved in.
Even before the first favela came into being, poor citizens were pushed away from the city and forced to live in the far suburbs. However, most modern favelas appeared in the 1970s due to rural exodus,
when many people left rural areas of Brazil and moved to cities.
Without finding a place to live, many people ended up in a favela. Census data released in December 2011 by the IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) shows that in 2010, about 6 percent of the population lived in slums in Brazil.
This means that 11.4 million of the 190 million people that lived in
the country resided in areas of irregular occupation definable by lack
of public services or urbanization, referred to by the IBGE as
"subnormal agglomerations".
The people who live in favelas are known as Moradores da favela, or pejoratively as favelados. Favelas are associated with extreme poverty. Brazil's favelas can be seen as the result of the unequal distribution of wealth
in the country. Brazil is one of the most economically unequal
countries in the world with the top 10 percent of its population earning
50 percent of the national income and about 8.5 percent of all people
living below the poverty line.
The Brazilian government has made several attempts in the 20th
century to improve the nation's problem of urban poverty. One way was by
the eradication of the favelas and favela dwellers that occurred during
the 1970s while Brazil was under military governance. These favela
eradication programs forcibly removed over 100,000 residents and placed
them in public housing projects or back to the rural areas that many
emigrated from. Another attempt to deal with urban poverty came by way of gentrification.
The government sought to upgrade the favelas and integrate them into
the inner city with the newly urbanized upper-middle class. As these
"upgraded favelas" became more stable, they began to attract members of
the lower-middle class pushing the former favela dwellers onto the
streets or outside of the urban center and into the suburbs further away
from opportunity and economic advancement. For example: in Rio de
Janeiro, the vast majority of the homeless population is black, and part
of that can be attributed to favela gentrification and displacement of
those in extreme poverty.
WWW.FAVELAPAINTING.COM ~ The Favela Painting project was founded in 2005
by Jeroen Koolhaas and Dre Urhahn. Go to our site or favela painting on
facebook. Special thanks to Rob Admiraal who designed Rio Cruzeiro with
us. Thank you Rogier Postma for making ths infomercial happen, Jesse
Koolhaas for soundtrack, Jelle de Boer for audio mixing, Ralph de Haan
and Hazaza for postproduction and Fernanda Clemente for translations.
The following are the "favela" painting proposals designed by local fifth graders in our community.
The following are the "favela" painting proposals designed by local fifth graders in our community.
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