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![]() ![]() Rio de Janeiro(The World Social Forum took place in Porto Alegre, Brazil, in January 2003. I attended with a Global Exchange delegation. The trip began with several days in Rio de Janeiro exploring issues of socio-economic inequalities. This is a report on the first part of the trip; the Porto Alegre part is also available.)
![]() ![]() The MST formed in the late 1970s during the military dictatorship to defend the rights and lives of peasants who had been expelled from their lands. Originally rooted in the Pastoral Land Commission of the Catholic Church, in separated in the mid-1980s to form its own organization. Today it has grown into one of Brazil's largest and strongest social movements. It operates in 23 of Brazil's states and exerts a positive influence on governmental policy. ![]() January 20, 2003. Today we visited with the Ação Social Padre Anchieta (ASPA, Padre Anchieta Social Association), a non-profit community organization that works in Rocinha. ASPA engages in socio-educative, cultural, and religious work with the objective to elevate the quality of life of poor people in Rio de Janeiro, especially in Rocinha. Founded by the Jesuits in 1960, it is one of the oldest such organizations working on social projects in Rio. Rocinha (which means "little plantation" or "garden" in Portuguese), began as a favela (slum) on the outskirts of Rio about 50 years ago. It housed immigrants, largely from the impoverished northeast area part of Brazil who came to Rio looking for a better life. Instead of finding better living conditions, they were pushed to the margins--living in shacks on the hillsides around Rio without basic services. ![]() Today Rocinha is one of Rio's biggest neighborhood communities, with almost one million inhabitants. Together the community has made great strides working on such communal projects as schools, police, potable water, sanitation services, and community radio. In addition they have set up a popular bank that offers small loans to community members at low interest rates. One of the biggest issues they continue to work on is securing property rights for community members so that they don't lose their houses in which they live. In addition, the moist air of Rio combined with a lack of ventilation in the houses built on top of each other results in high rates of TB. ![]() January 21, 2003.
The Instituto Brasileiro de Análises Sociais e Econômicas
(iBase, Brazilian Institute of Social
and Economic Analyses) is a non-governmental think tank founded in 1981 during the military
dictatorship to work on economic and social issues. It works with social organizations to give a
voice to poor people. Brazil has the greatest inequality of wealth in the world; 1 percent of the
population owns half of the country's wealth. Implementing democratic structures such as elections
is only half of the process in democraticizing a country. In Brazil, this process is limited by
extreme socio-economic inequalities. To address these problems, iBase is working in four main areas:
transparency and social accountability participatoin and sustainable local development, public
policies and globalization, and processes of social inclusion.
On the evening of January 22, we flew to Porto Alegre. |