necessity. Unfortunately, here in Rio we see that the state's resources are distributed according to visibility … You can verify that there are areas in the interior of the capital or in the Baixada [Baixada Fluminense is a neighbor district of Rio de
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The Permeable Olympic Fortress
Mega-Event Security as Camouflage in Rio de Janeiro
Dennis Pauschinger
“What about Last Time?”
Exploring Potentiality in Danish Young Women's Violent Conflicts
Ann-Karina Henriksen
, and Sveinung Sandberg . 2012 . “ Dealing with a Gendered Economy: Female Drug Dealers and Street Capital .” European Journal of Criminology 9 ( 6 ): 621 – 635 . 10.1177/1477370812453103 Green , Linda. 1994 . “ Fear as a Way of Life
Introduction
Exceptionalism and Necropolitical Security Dynamics in Olympic Rio de Janeiro
Margit Ystanes and Tomas Salem
Brazil]. Carta Capital , 15 August . https://www.cartacapital.com.br/sociedade/a-violencia-contra-jovens-negros-no-brasil . Rocha , Luciane de Oliveira . 2012 . “ Black Mothers’ Experiences of Violence in Rio de Janeiro .” In Vargas 2012a
Leyla Neyzi, Nida Alahmad, Nina Gren, Martha Lagace, Chelsey Ancliffe, and Susanne Bregnbæk
”). For this book, Feldman carried out research in the UN archives in the Jordanian capital of Amman, as well as several ethnographic fieldworks in several different localities over a period of six years (2008–2014), but she obviously also builds on her
“I Showed You What I Thought Was Appropriate”
Reflections on Longitudinal Ethnographic Research and the Performativity of Dutch Gang Life
Robert A. Roks
three, he migrated with his parents to the Netherlands. After living in the nation's capital of Amsterdam for a year, Raymond's family moved to a small neighborhood in the city of The Hague. Together with his three brothers, Raymond—the second eldest son
Eluding the Esculacho
A Masculinities Perspective on the Enduring Warrior Ethos of Rio de Janeiro's Police
Celina Myrann Sørbøe
,132 of which occurred in the capital. In 2013, 99.5 percent of the victims were male, 79 percent were black, and 75 percent were between the age of 15 and 30 ( AI 2015 ). Scholars, activists, and favela residents I interviewed have denounced these