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The ethics of racial silence in urban Brazil: Public policies and social inequality in Recife, 1900-1940

ABSTRACT

More than half a century after racial prejudice became central to urban civil rights movements in the United States and South Africa, and decades after the emergence of Brazil’s contemporary Black movements, Brazil's internationally recognized body of rights-to-the-city legislation still adheres to the country's long historical tradition of racial silence. This article explores the historical roots of this phenomenon by focusing on the emergence of racial silence in Recife, Brazil during the first half of the 20th Century. Recife was and remains a paradigmatic example of the process through which a city marked by its Black and African roots came to be legally and politically defined as a poor, underdeveloped and racially neutral space, where social inequalities derived from capitalist exclusion rather than from slavery and scientific racism. As such, Recife's experience sheds light on the urban policies that were generated in the shadow of racial silence.

KEYWORDS:
Recife; Right to the City; Black; Inequality; Mocambo; Informality

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