Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Garbage, Favelas, and the Politics of Olympic Fitness of Nation-states

They're currently finishing an Olympic swimming pool next to the favela of Rocinha, in Rio de Janeiro, where I live. In other news from the hood, the open sewage canal that runs through Rocinha's lower parts is used for non-Olympic sport by its children.

A standard account of Brazil can be summarily narrated as follows: the country's high GINI coefficient encapsulates a reality of a very rich few, a very poor majority, and despite a growing middle class resulting from recent economic gains Brazil continues to be a generally unequal place. Beyond highlighting this now obvious social landscape of inequity and inequality, such contrasts levy a more global accusation. They take to task the shaky judgments of those who hold that the Games, and mega events moreover, can take place in some countries, such as Brazil, but not in others. Apparently there is a natural moral geography to who can be granted a bid.

Following this hypothesis, retrospectively we should have been aghast that Qatar won the seat for the 2022 World Cup, more so even than if any other country had come out on top. And many people were. The British press was particularly livid, finding an opening to jab at the inadequacies of Qatari infrastructure. Lately, state and municipal patrons have come to justify such sporting events by touting their tangible "legacies.” The Olympic Games in particular have been able to garner broad-based legitimacy based on their potential to catalyze the modernization of host country infrastructure. The recent 2012 London Olympics had been defended along these lines.

Clearly, then, there is something more to disputing the competency of Qatar’s construction industry in light of Doha’s burgeoning skyline. These assaults on the number of hotel rooms and stadiums cloaked the core of a stance that quickly became undressed: Qatar was an inconceivable choice because it was a morally unsound candidate. Terrorism, the treatment of women, and the outlawing of homosexuality in Qatar were just some of the chips picked out and thrown onto the scale that out-weighed its suitability for World Cup hosting.  

Reviving Failed States through the Categorization of Olympic Candidates

We should look askance when complex societal problems facilitated or coerced by nation-states are distilled to a select few that can be easily referenced to sort the rotten tomatoes from the ripe ones. Why are we compelled to play such sorting games, in the first place? I am not implying that we cannot have strong opinions about other parts of the world other than our own, or that these concerns are not related to any empirical value. But being critical of the policies of nation-states should not be equivalent to embracing dogmatic moral categorizations, where the problems with such taxonomies are manifold.

In the words of pedagogue Patti Lather, “to put into categories is an act of power.” In this sense, the battles for mega event bids are the products of a larger geopolitical war of selecting ethical categories that are readily propped up and then slammed down to delegitimize contenders. Human rights violations that we all generally agree to are emphasized but can simultaneously crowd out of sight other social problems. This includes many urgent infrastructural needs that have yet to be popularly recognized and branded as “rights.”

Imperative social services like sanitation are among them, and some of the most dire in the future World Cup and Olympic host city of Rio de Janeiro. In a slum like Rocinha, the lack of sanitation and waste collection continues to breed dengue and tuberculosis, especially during the warm summer months. Also of special significance, infants and young children are more likely than older children and adults to develop life-threatening forms of many of these diseases. Despite the widely acclaimed successes of UPP pacification, the city is still trying to take full account of these public services that were originally under the jurisdiction of traffickers.

Hegemonic media outlets control the tone and content of this public discussion, but the use of these manageable sets to identify deviant states or even “failed” states also simplifies our political understandings. Together, they direct and redirect our attention to what is important, where we place our moral outrage as cosmopolitan citizens. As a BRIC member, public officials and private investors would like to replace the previous outline of Brazil with a “Brazil on the rise,” the upcoming economic and political leader of Latin America. This is promoted in some measure by displacing our attention to other offenders, encouraging an amnesia to the original controversies raised following Rio’s win, which the work of favela residents, public defenders, and human rights activists in Rio and abroad urge us not to forget.

There is a large part of the country that is not rising, but rather mobilizing around key urban issues. Prominent among them are the most vulnerable of Brazilian citizens who still live in squalor at the hands of state and municipal strategic planning that favor swimming pools and the metallic gleam of cable cars to the provision of fundamental public services. Their local contestation of the institutional landscape of sanitation and trash management is unraveling this optimistic image of a Brazil transformed.

As today's June downpour falls and ruffles the Rio de Janeiro Metropolitan Area, the many steep and narrow concrete alleyways of Rocinha have turned into lethal chutes of storm water runoff. The children of my alleyway delight in the rapids of the muck. Allowing kids to grow up in nefarious brews of feces and dog shit peppered with chemicals and electronic waste is not a "small thing." It is an active abuse of human rights, whether or not the mainstream Left decides to cling to a provincial rubric.