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  • Rio de Janeiro, August 31st, 2013: Guilherme Leitão de Carvalho runs through an exhibition with the work of the Chinese artist Cai Guo–Qiang at the Centro Cultural dos Correios (Post Office Museum)
    Old_Rio_de_Janeiro_013.jpg
  • Rio de Janeiro, August 31st, 2013: Maricéia da Silva Morais (pink shirt) takes her grandson Guilherme to see an exhibition with the work of the Chinese artist Cai Guo–Qiang at the Centro Cultural dos Correios (Post Office Museum)
    Old_Rio_de_Janeiro_012.jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160909_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160910_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Eletric posts with illegal connections in a commercial area near Manaus docks. Amazonas, the state for which Manaus is the capital, has avarage energy losses of 43%, the highest in Brazil
    20160909_SmartMeteringSiemens_DIG_00...jpg
  • Office in Itamaraty Palace for Hélio Vitor Ramos Filho, communications director of Brazil's Foreign Ministry. Designed by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer and located in Brasilia, Brazil's capital, the Itamaraty Palace is the home of Brazil's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    Itamaraty-Niemeyer-Brasilia011.jpg
  • Worker from Rio's eletricity company work on a lamp post along the main road of Vidigal. Like almost all shantytowns in Rio de Janeiro, Vidigal spent years under the control of heavily armed drug gangs. When the city was chosen to host the 2016 Olympic Games, Rio government began a new policing strategy, called Pacification Policing, to regain the control of chosen favelas strategic for the safety of the Games. A charming community with a welcoming atmosphere, an intense cultural life and one of the most breathtaking views of Rio, Vidigal quickly became the most successful story of the Pacification program. Drug traffic didn’t completely disappear, but armed men no longer controlled it’s streets and alleyways. Police officers could patrol the community on foot and both locals and outsiders could walk around without risking harassment. Soon Vidigal became a magnet for tourists and wealthy cariocas alike, who first made it a party destination and didn’t take long to start buying hillside shacks to replace them with fancy houses and boutique hotels. Residents feared gentrification would make their community unaffordable to them, but welcomed the attention and economic opportunities. Now, with Rio's economic colapse after the games and the government in a state of paralysis because of a giant corruption scandal, they are witnessing the community's reversal to it's violent past, as drug dealers regain control and public services onde more disappear
    20150311_VidigalRio2016_DIG_0001_DSC...jpg
  • Worker from Rio's eletricty company work on a lamp post along the main road of Vidigal, a favela in Rio de Janeiro
    20150311_VidigalRio2016_DIG_0001_DSC...jpg
  • Worker from Rio's eletricty company work on a lamp post along the main road of Vidigal, a favela in Rio de Janeiro
    20150311_VidigalRio2016_DIG_0001_DSC...jpg
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André Vieira

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