Current:Home > MyBrazil’s official term for poor communities has conveyed stigma. A change has finally been made -AssetLink
Brazil’s official term for poor communities has conveyed stigma. A change has finally been made
View
Date:2025-04-16 12:04:53
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — After decades of delay and pressure, Brazil announced Tuesday that it will henceforth use “favelas and urban communities” to categorize thousands of poor, urban neighborhoods, instead of the previous term “subnormal agglomerates” that was widely viewed as stigmatizing.
Starting in the 1990s, the national statistics and geography institute, known by its Portuguese acronym IBGE, began using “subnormal agglomerates” to describe places with irregular occupation and deficient public services.
The umbrella term included not just favelas — most commonly associated with dense, hillside neighborhoods in Rio de Janeiro — but also a slew of other terms employed across Brazil, like grottoes, lowlands, stilted houses and more, where millions reside.
The name change announced in a statement follows a process of reflection that began in the 2000s, and IBGE held more than 20 internal meetings and then several more with a consultation group of outside experts, according to its geography coordinator, Cayo Franco.
The concept of “subnormality” referred to people’s living conditions, but “many times it was understood as the condition of the people themselves,” Franco told The Associated Press in a video call. It was also too vague to represent reality.
Further, “agglomeration” transmitted an image of people piled atop one another, said Theresa Williamson, executive director of a favela advocacy group, Catalytic Communities. Many of these neighborhoods aren’t recent; rather, they are consolidated, having been built up over generations with individual or collective investment, and in spite of chronic state negligence in providing sanitation, infrastructure, education and other services.
“When you have a term that’s pejorative, labeling such a huge portion of the country, it can only be counterproductive,” said Williamson. “You need terms that are more nuanced when you’re talking about such large sectors of society, especially that you need to be able to embrace and engage in constructive ways so that you (the government) can improve them, rather than sort of deny them any value.”
Rio state lawmaker Renata Souza, who was born and raised in the bayside Mare favela, one of the city’s most populous, said her doctorate in communications and culture taught her the importance of words, and she celebrated IBGE’s move.
“The word ‘subnormal’ is something that has always really affected me, because it gives the idea of an aberration, of a non-place,” she told the AP on the phone. “Nomenclature is used to consolidate prejudices, discriminations.”
Souza volunteered to survey Mare residents for the IBGE’s census in 2000.
“Having to work with that word was horrible for me,” she said.
In the process of conducting its next census, a decade later, expanding deficient mapping of the historically neglected areas took priority over considering a change to the problematic name, IBGE’s Franco said.
“So that was left for later. But I think a moment of institutional and societal maturity has been reached, in which there is sizeable representation of those territories, residents’ associations and groups that even conduct research and produce statistics,” he said.
He noted the recent creation of a secretariat for peripheries in lefist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s cities ministry.
Homes cover a hill in the poor Rocinha favela of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sept. 30, 2022. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix, File)
According to the institute’s preliminary data from the 2022 census that the AP reviewed early last year, the number of people living in neighborhoods at the time called “subnormal agglomerates” jumped 40% since the 2010 census to 16 million people.
Franco said that the institute has identified more such areas with the help of city authorities and civil society groups; their total population will be incorporated into 2022 census data and released in the second half of this year.
The change in name won’t affect historic census data and, as before, the IBGE will cease to consider areas “favelas and urban communties” once most residents gain legal title to properties or all essential services are available.
The term “favela” draws its origins from the 19th century, when soldiers and former slaves who had fought in the Canudos War in northeast Brazil occupied a hillside in Rio, the capital at the time, to pressure the government to fulfill its promise to provide housing. The veterans named the informal settlement Favela Hill after a highly resilient flowering plant found in the northeast. Today, the downtown neighborhood is known as Providencia.
Souza, the lawmaker, said the term underscores residents’ struggle and resilience.
“It’s a plant that grows in the middle of the Brazilian savannah, and survives without water and with very high sun exposure,” she said. “It is very important that we take back this word.”
“Favela” is used widely in Rio, but not elsewhere in Brazil, so IBGE sought to append another catch-all term for the category. At a meeting last September with civil society groups in the capital, Brasilia, the institute proposed adoption of “favelas and popular settlements” and, following discussions, that was discarded in favor of “favelas and popular territories” or “favelas and urban communities.” IBGE ultimately opted for the latter.
“We have had some back and forth, but it was positive. It will be positive for IBGE and for Brazilian society that we have made this change,” Franco said. “It better represents what we want to map and better represents what people should understand from the data.”
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- You Returning for a Fifth and Final Season as Joe Goldberg's Killer Story Comes to an End
- Remembering America's first social network: the landline telephone
- 'Age of Wonders 4' Review: This Magical Mystery Game is Hoping to Take You Away
- Chief beer officer for Yard House: A side gig that comes with a daily swig.
- What It's Like Inside The Submersible That's Lost In The Atlantic
- Search for Madeleine McCann will resume in coming days, say Portuguese police
- Prepare for next pandemic, future pathogens with even deadlier potential than COVID, WHO chief warns
- Breaking debut in Olympics raises question: Are breakers artists or athletes?
- Harry Styles Called Emily Ratajkowski His Celebrity Crush Years Before They Kissed in Tokyo
Ranking
- Kourtney Kardashian Cradles 9-Month-Old Son Rocky in New Photo
- After days of destruction, Macron blames a familiar bogeyman: video games
- Ukrainian soldiers held as Russian prisoners of war return to the battlefield: Now it's personal
- Small tsunami after massive 7.7-magnitude earthquake in South Pacific west of Fiji
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Selena Gomez Defends Hailey Bieber Against Death Threats and Hateful Negativity
- Khloé Kardashian's Good American 70% Off Deals: Last Day to Shop $21 Bodysuits, $37 Dresses, and More
- Pentagon leaker shared sensitive info with people in foreign countries, prosecutors say
Recommendation
Mega Millions winning numbers for August 6 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $398 million
CIA seeks to recruit Russian spies with new video campaign
21 Useful Amazon Products That'll Help You Stop Losing Things
iHeartRadio Music Awards 2023 Red Carpet Fashion: See Every Look as the Stars Arrive
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Car rushes through Vatican gate, police fire at tires before arresting driver
New Zealand hostel fire kills at least 6 in fire chief's worst nightmare
Remains of retired American Marine killed in Ukraine being returned to U.S.