Postcards from Rio examines the complex interconnections between notions of citizenship and space in the works of photographers and video makers. The city then emerges as political space where a multiplicity of interests and urban policies are intertwined with demands for more inclusive forms of governance-certainly a form of citizenship that promotes inclusion, nondiscrimination, equal treatment, and the right to have a say over the city’s future. They also denounce the key role played by race in a logic characterized by models of exclusion and discrimination that structure the social and spatial organization of the city. The cultural productions analysed here discuss the impacts and priorities of the urban interventions on the sphere of the individual and the collectively. The book also discusses the centrality of favelas in the marketing and branding of the city as a strategy to attract external investors and tourists. This cultural production lays the foundation for an aesthetic of representation involved in the appropriation and rewriting of the city as part of a process of political resistance and affirmation of difference. These new mediators are mostly young people of the favelas, whose daily practices are used as the lens through which they contest stigmatized images of favelas.
Only that, in this case, the point of departure is a cultural production that, coming from the peripheries, reconfigures dominant images of the favelas, their residents, and the city itself. It dialogues with a large body of scholarship on Rio de Janeiro and its favelas in particular. It dialogues with a large body of scholarship on Rio. He was also suspended from the police department, where he worked as a civilian employee, according to the reports.Published in print: 2017 Published Online: January 2018 ISBN: 9780823276547 eISBN: 9780823277223 Item type: book Publisher: Fordham University Press DOI: 10.5422/fordham/9780823276547.001.0001 Subject: Sociology, Urban and Rural Studies The judge wasn’t buying his excuse, however, and found Roche guilty. It is unclear what his relationship to the girl and her family was. Police said Roche had been out with the girl’s mom and siblings. “She contributed to that occurring by releasing her body weight and sliding through my hands,” he said, blaming his tiny victim. I can get her and give her a kiss on the cheek like her two sisters and mum.” “My mind has gone off on a tangent like this is a challenge to me. “My hands have slid up her body as she slid to the ground,” the sicko told police. The girl later told authorities that she still suffers nightmares from the harrowing July 2019 assault, according to the Herald.īut Roche told the judge he was just playing around and claimed there was “no sexual gratification on my behalf.” Roche seems to be playfully chasing the girl but then the sicko grabs her, fondles her and tries to kiss her while she tries to wrestle free, the footage posted by TVNZ-TV shows.
Glenn Roche, 54, who was found guilty of indecent assault this week, is seen in the footage chasing the youngster into the elevator after a day out with her family, the New Zealand Herald reported on Thursday. Virginia school board faces parents again after sexual assault controversyĭisturbing new video shows the moment an Australian police department employee corners a 13-year-old girl in an elevator and gropes her as she frantically attempts to get away.
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