In their research, Anjuli Fahlberg, Cristiane Martins, Joiceane Lopes, Ana Cláudia Araújo, Lidiane Santos, Sophia Costa, and Guilherme Baratho examine how democracy is being recreated in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas, particularly Cidade de Deus, where Covid-19 was first recorded. Drawing on their research on the pandemic’s impact on local residents vis-à-vis emergent forms of autonomous governance and how these are shaped by gender and racial dynamics, they argue that civic associations’ mobilization tactics in Cidade de Deus can help us understand how democracy is being reinvented in these spaces under conditions of extreme governmental neglect.
Cristiane Martins
Cristiane Martins has a BA in social work and is currently getting her MA in sociology. She is codirector of the Building Together Research Collective, in partnership with Tufts University, and works as a social worker at Nóiz, an NGO located in Cidade de Deus. Martins has extensive experience in social projects, and she currently serves as a member of the editorial board of Revista África e Africanidades, and she is also a member of the Desce Favela Institute in Complexo do Lins.