Order of Canada and Favela: Difference between pages

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{{wiktionary|favela}}
{{Infobox order
[[Image:RiodeJaneiro-Favela.jpg|thumb|240px|[[Vidigal (favela)|Vidigal]], a [[Rio de Janeiro]] favela.]]
|name = Order of Canada
|image = [[Image:3 Order of Canada grades.JPG|Companion, Officer and Member insignia|250px]]
|caption = Companion, Officer and Member insignia on display
|awarded_by = the [[Image:Royal Standard of Canada.svg|30px]] [[Monarchy of Canada|Queen of Canada]]
|type = [[Order (decoration)|Order]]
|motto = ''Desiderantes meliorem patriam''
|day =
|eligibility = All living Canadians, except federal and provincial politicians and judges while they are holding office.
|for = The highest degree of merit to Canada and humanity, an outstanding level of talent and service to Canadians, or an exceptional contribution to Canada or Canadians.
|status = Currently constituted
|sovereign = Her Majesty [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II]], [[Monarchy of Canada|Queen of Canada]]
|chancellor = Her Excellency The Right Honourable [[Michaëlle Jean]], [[Governor General of Canada]]
|commander =
|grades = Companion, Officer, Member
|former_grades = Medal of Service, Medal of Courage
|established = April 17, 1967
|first_induction = July 1, 1967
|last_induction =
|total = 5,479
|recipients =
|individual =
|higher = [[Queen's Privy Council for Canada]]
|lower = [[Queen's Counsel]]{{Fact|date=July 2008}}
|image2 =
|caption2 =
}}
The '''Order of Canada''' is the highest civilian [[Commonwealth realms orders and decorations|honour]] within the [[Orders, decorations, and medals of Canada|Canadian system of honours]], with membership awarded to those who exemplify the order's [[Latin]] [[motto]], taken from [[Epistle to the Hebrews|Hebrews]] 11:16, ''desiderantes meliorem patriam'', meaning "They desire a better country."


'''Favela''' (Portuguese and Spanish for ''slum'') is a specifically [[Brazil]]ian word for a [[shanty town]]. The majority have electricity, but in most cases it is illegally tapped from the public grid. Favelas are constructed from a variety of materials, ranging from bricks to garbage. Many favelas are very close and very cramped. They are plagued by sewage, crime and hygiene problems. Although many of the most infamous are located in [[Rio de Janeiro]], there are favelas in almost every large or even mid-sized Brazilian town. In Rio one in every four ''cariocas'' (as Rio's inhabitants are called) lives in a favela.<ref>RIO DE JANEIRO: Microcosm of the Future. By: Foek, Anton. Humanist, Jul/Aug2005, Vol. 65 Issue 4, p31-34, 4p. </ref> As a general rule, Brazilian cities do not recognize the existence of favelas as a legal entity. The name originates from a species of plant with thorny leaves that grows in the [[semi-arid]] [[Northeast Region, Brazil|North-East]] region. Refugees and former soldiers involved in the [[Canudos Civil War]] (1895–1896) in [[Bahia]] would eventually settle on unreclaimed public land on a hill in Rio de Janeiro called Morro da Providência, because the government failed to provide any housing for them. There the former soldiers named their new settlement Morro da Favela, after a plant which had thrived at the site of their famous victory against the rebels.<ref>Neuwirth, R (2004) Shadow Cities: A Billion Squatters, A New Urban World, Routledge ISBN 0415933196</ref>
Created in 1967, the order was established as a fellowhip that recognizes the achievement of outstanding merit or distinguished service by Canadians, through life-long contributions in every field of endeavour, and who made a major difference to Canada, as well as the efforts made by non-Canadians who have made the world better by their actions.<ref>Canada, Finance and Corporate Service (FIN CS): [http://www.admfincs.forces.gc.ca/admfincs/subjects/cfao/018-04_e.asp Canadian Forces Administrative Order (CFAO) 18-4: Recommendations for Canadian Orders, Decorations and Military Honours]</ref> The [[Monarchy of Canada|Canadian monarch]], at present [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II]], is Sovereign of the order, and the serving [[Governor General of Canada|Governor General]], [[Michaëlle Jean]], is its Chancellor and Principal Companion. Appointees into the order are selected by an advisory board and formally inducted by the Governor General; as of April 2008, 5,479 people have been appointed to the Order of Canada,<ref>Governor General of Canada: [http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/index_e.asp?results=1&Firstname=&Middlename=&Lastname=&City=&Province=&TypeID=orc&Honours=&Field=&deceased=&AwardStart=&AwardEnd=&InvestStart=&InvestEnd=&npp=25 Order of Canada]</ref> including musicians, politicians, artists, athletes, television and film stars, benefactors, and others. Since 1994,<ref>[http://gg.ca/honours/pdf/OCnewsWinter2008.pdf Order of Canada Newsletter Winter 2008]</ref> non-honorary members are the only regular citizens who are empowered to administer the [[Oath of citizenship (Canada)|Canadian Oath of Citizenship]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.icc-icc.ca/en/materials/enhandbooklight.pdf |title=Welcoming Canadians (pg 40) |accessdate=2008-04-18 |date=2007-09-17 |format=PDF |publisher=Institute for Canadian Citizenship }}</ref>


Over the years, many freed [[History of Slavery#Slavery in Brazil|black slaves]] moved in, contributing to its current state of poverty by replacing refugees as the major ethnic group. However, long before the first settlement called "favela" came into being, poor blacks were pushed away from downtown into the far suburbs. Favelas were handy for them because they allowed them to be close to work, while keeping away from where they were not welcome.
==Creation==
The Order of Canada was instituted on April 17, 1967, by Queen [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II]], on [[Advice (constitutional)|the advice]] of her then [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]], [[Lester B. Pearson]], who was assisted with the establishment of the order by [[John Matheson]]. The order was officially launched on July 1, 1967, during the [[Canadian Centennial|100th anniversary celebrations]] of the formation of the [[Dominion of Canada]]. Governor General [[Roland Michener]] was the first inductee to the order, to the level of Companion,<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=1170 Roland Michener's listing on the Order of Canada rolls.]</ref> with 90 more people appointed on July 7 of the same year, including [[Vincent Massey]], [[Louis St. Laurent]], [[Hugh MacLennan]], [[David Bauer (ice hockey)|Father David Bauer]], [[Gabrielle Roy]], [[Donald Creighton]], [[Thérèse Casgrain]], [[Wilder Penfield]], [[Arthur Lismer]] and [[Maurice Richard]].<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=4337 Governor General Adrienne Clarkson's speech at an October 30, 2004, Order of Canada investiture]</ref> The Queen was presented with the Sovereign's badge by Michener during a visit by him to [[London]], [[United Kingdom|UK]], that same year, and she first wore it during a banquet in [[Yellowknife, Northwest Territories|Yellowknife]] in July, 1970.<ref>[http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/page5218.asp Official Website of the British Monarchy. Royal Insight Magazine: Mailbox: April 2006 Page 3]</ref>


==Description==
The creation of the order was the beginning of a [[Orders, decorations, and medals of Canada|Canadian honours system]], and reduced the use of the [[Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom|honours system]] of the [[United Kingdom]] and some of its former [[Crown colonies]]; prior to the creation of the Order of Canada, the main order Canadians were inducted into for the above criteria was the [[Order of the British Empire]].<ref>[http://www.etoile.co.uk/Columns/Paul/040530.html Paul James article on British Orders.]</ref> The order also inspired [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]] to follow on Canada and create similar honours: the [[Order of Australia]] and the [[Order of New Zealand]] respectively. The [[Provinces and territories of Canada|provinces]] also followed suit, each creating [[Orders, decorations, and medals of Canada#Provincial and territorial orders|their own distinct orders]].
A favela is fundamentally different from a [[slum]] or [[tenement]], for the poor unfortunate people that live there, primarily in terms of its origin and location. While slum quarters in other [[Latin American]] countries generally form when poorer residents from the countryside come to larger cities in search of work, and while this also occurs to some extent with favelas, the latter are unique in that they were chiefly created as large populations became displaced. {{Fact|date=July 2008}}Favelas differ from ghettos such as those in the [[United States]] in that they are racially mixed, even though blacks make up the majority of the population - that is, in Brazil it is chiefly economic forces, rather than ethnic or cultural issues, that drive people there. Although favelas were first mostly made up of most Afro-Brazilians they slowly began to consist of many European immigrants arriving in the 19th century.<ref>Ney dos Santos Oliveira.,"Favelas and Ghettos: race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City., Latin American, vol 23 no. 4 Perspectives </ref>


Shanty towns are units of irregular self-constructed housing that are typically unlicensed and occupied illegally. They are usually on lands belonging to third parties, and are most often located on the urban periphery. Shanty town residences are built randomly, although [[ad hoc]] networks of stairways, sidewalks, and simple tracks allow bpassage through them. Most favelas are inaccessible by vehicle, due to their narrow and irregular streets and walkways and often steep inclines. {{Fact|date=September 2008}}
==Grades==
There are three grades (levels) of the Order of Canada, in order of precedence: ''Companion'', ''Officer'', and ''Member'', each with respective [[post-nominal]] letters that its members are entitled to use. Promotions in grade are possible, though this is ordinarily not done within five years of the initial appointment. For example, [[film director]] [[Denys Arcand]] was promoted from Officer to Companion.<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=4454 Announcement of Denys Arcand's promotion in the Order]</ref>


These areas of irregular and poor-quality housing are often crowded onto hillsides, and as a result, these areas suffer from frequent [[landslides]] during heavy rain. In recent decades, favelas have been troubled by [[drug-related crime]] and [[gang]] warfare. There are often common social codes in some favelas which forbid residents from engaging in criminal activity inside their own favela.
When it was created the order had, in effect, only two ranks, Companion and the Medal of Service, but it included a third award, the Medal of Courage. The latter medal, meant to reward acts of gallantry, fell between the other two awards in level honour but was anomalous within the Order of Canada{{ndash}} not a middle grade of the among three of a kind, but effectively a separate award of different nature. On July 1, 1972, without ever having been awarded, it was replaced by the separate [[Cross of Valour (Canada)|Cross of Valour]]. At the same time, the levels of Officer and Member were introduced and all existing holders of the Medal of Service were made Officers. This fulfilled the vision of Lester Pearson for a three-tiered structure.<ref>[http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0005969 The Canadian Encyclopedia entry on the Order]</ref><ref>{{cite book| last = McCreery| first = Christopher| authorlink = | title = The Order of Canada: Its Origins, History, and Development| publisher = University of Toronto Press| year = 2005| pages = pp. 126, 149, 166| url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0802039405}}</ref>


===Companion===
==History==
[[Image:Favela-CCBY.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Precarious houses in the favela of [[Complexo do Alem&atilde;o]] in Rio de Janeiro.]]
{{main|List of Companions of the Order of Canada}}
It is generally agreed upon that the first favela was created in November 1897 when 20,000 [[veteran]] soldiers were brought to Rio de Janeiro and left with no place to live.<ref>[http://www.brazzillog.com/pages/cvrjun97.htm Favelas commemorate 100 years - accessed December 25 2006]</ref> Some of the older favelas were originally started as ''[[quilombo]]s'' (independent settlements of fugitive [[Africa]]n slaves) among the hilly terrain of the area surrounding Rio, which later grew as slaves were liberated in 1888 with no place to live. The favelas were formed prior to the dense occupation of cities and the domination of real estate interests.<ref>Ney dos Santos Oliveira., "Favelas and Ghettos:race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City"</ref> The housing crisis of the 1940s forced the urban poor to erect hundreds of shantytowns in the suburbs, when favelas replaced tenements as the main type of residence for destitute ''cariocas'' (residents of Rio). The explosive era of favela growth dates from the 1940s, when [[Get&uacute;lio Vargas]]'s industrialization drive pulled hundreds of thousands of migrants into the Federal District, until 1970, when shantytowns expanded beyond urban Rio and into the metropolitan periphery.<ref>Pino, Julio Cesar. Sources on the history of favelas in Brazil.</ref> Most of the current favelas began in the 1970s, as a construction boom in the richer neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro initiated a [[rural exodus]] of workers from poorer [[states]] in Brazil. Heavy flooding in the low-lying slum areas of Rio also forcibly removed a large population into favelas, which are mostly located on Rio's various hillsides. Since favelas have been created under different terms but with similar end results, the term favela has become generally interchangeable with any impoverished areas.
''Companions of the Order of Canada'' (post-nominal: ''CC'') have demonstrated the highest degree of merit to Canada and humanity, on the national or international scene. Up to 15 Companions are appointed each year, with a limit of 165 living Companions at any given time, save for honorary Companions;<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/honours/nat-ord/oc/oc-con_e.asp Order of Canada Constitution.]</ref> as of February 20, 2007, there were 168 living Companions, including four honorary.<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/index_e.asp?TypeID=orc The criteria were Honours received: C.C., Living and Records per page: All]</ref> The constitution of the Order of Canada allows for each Governor General and his or her spouse, to become a Companion of the order upon the viceroy's appointment; thus, with her appointment to the position of Governor General, [[Michaëlle Jean]] became the 164th living Companion, and [[Jean-Daniel Lafond]] the 165th.<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/gg/rr/ins/index_e.asp Insignia Worn by the Governor General]</ref>


== Public policy towards favelas ==
===Officer===
The explosive growth of favelas triggered government removal campaigns. A program in the 1940s called Parque Proletário destroyed the original homes of favelados in Rio and relocated them to temporary housing as they waited for the building of public housing.<ref> Ney dos Santos Oliveira., "Favelas and Ghettos: race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City"</ref> Eventually little public housing was built and the land that was cleared for it just become reoccupied with new settlements of favelados. In 1955, Dom [[H&eacute;lder C&acirc;mara]], Archbishop of [[Recife]] and Auxiliary Bishop of Rio de Janeiro, launched the ''Cruzada São Sebastião'' (St. Sebastian's Crusade), a federally financed project to build an apartment complex in the largest favela at the time, Praia do Pinto. The goal of the Cruzada was to transform favela dwellers into more acceptable citizens by only housing those willing to give up the vices associated with favela life. One in Praia do Pinto and the other in the favela of Rádio Nacional in Parada de Lucas<ref>Pino, Julio Cesar. Sources on the History of favelas in Brazil.</ref> Removal programs of the favelas flourished once again in the 1970s under the military dictatorship, disguised as a government housing program for the poor. What really happened was that more favelas were eliminated and its residents were displaced to urban territory lacking basic infrastructure.<ref> Ney dos Santos Oliveira., "Favelas and Ghettos:race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City"</ref> the idea was to eliminate the physical existence of favelas by taking advantage of the cheaper prices of suburban land. The favela eradication program became paralyzed eventually because of the resistance of those who were supposed to benefit from the program and a distribution of income did not permit the poor to assume the economic burden of public housing that was placed on them.<ref>Housing Policy, Urban Poverty, and the State:The Favelas of Rio de Janeiro 1972-1976]</ref>
''Officers of the Order of Canada'' (''OC'') have demonstrated an outstanding level of talent and service to Canadians, and up to 64 Officers are appointed each year, with no limit to how many may be living at one time.<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/index_e.asp?TypeID=orc The criteria was Honours received: O.C., Living and Records per page: All].</ref> As of September 29, 2005, there were 1,006 living Officers.


== Formation of Favela Society==
===Member===
The people who live in favelas are known as '''''favelados'''''. As previously stated, the original favelados were of African descent, and Black Brazilians still make up the majority. However, with the influx of service and manufacturing jobs during the late 19th century in the core of Brazil's major cities, European immigrants and poor white Brazilians settled in the favelas as well. This new influx of people diversified the face of the favelado. This altered image of the favelado broadened the inequalities and discrimination associated with the favelas from simply racial inequality and discrimination to economic.<ref>Oliveira, Ney dos Santos.1996.Favelas and Ghettos: Race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City.''Latin American Perspectives'' 23:75.</ref> <br> Favelas are associated with immense poverty. Brazil's favelas can be seen as the result of the [[economic inequality|unequal distribution of wealth]] in the country. Brazil is one of the most economically unequal countries in the world with the top 10 percent of its population earning 50 percent of the national income and about 34 percent of all people living below the poverty line. The Brazilian government has made several attempts in the 20th century to improve the nation's problem of urban poverty. One way was by the eradication of the Favelas and favelados that occurred during the 1970s while Brazil was under military governance. These favela eradication programs forcibly removed over 100,000 residents and placed them in public housing projects or back to the rural areas that many emigrated from.<ref>Perlman, Janice E,.2006.The Metamorphosis of Marginality: Four Generations in the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro. ''The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science''.606 Annals 154:2</ref> Another attempt to deal with urban poverty came by way of [[gentrification]]. The government sought to upgrade the favelas and integrate them into the inner city with the newly urbanized upper-middle class. As these "upgraded favelas" became more stable, they began to attract members of the lower-middle class pushing the former favelados onto the streets or outside of the urban center and into the suburbs further away from opportunity and economic advancement. For example: in Rio de Janeiro, the vast majority of the homeless population is black, and part of that can be attributed to favela gentrification and displacement of those in extreme poverty.<ref>Oliveira, Ney dos Santos.1996.Favelas and Ghettos: Race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City.''Latin American Perspectives'' 23:82.</ref>
''Members of the Order of Canada'' (''CM'') have made an exceptional contribution to Canada or Canadians at a local or regional level, group, field or activity. As many as 136 Members may be appointed annually and there is no limit on how many Members may be living at one time. As of September 29, 2005, there were 1,964 living members.<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/index_e.asp?TypeID=orc The criteria was Honours received: C.M., Living and Records per page: All]. </ref>


===Drugs and the favela===
==Insignia==
[[Image:Bopeoper.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Police presence in a favela]]
[[Image:Personal Coat of Arms of Governor General of Canada Michaëlle Jean.jpg|thumb|The [[coat of arms]] of [[Michaëlle Jean]], Chancellor and Principal Companion of the Order of Canada, displaying the order motto and insignia.]]
The Colombian cocaine trade has impacted Brazil and in turn its favelas, which tend to be ruled by druglords. Regular shoot-outs between traffickers and police and other criminals, as well as assorted illegal activities, lead to murder rates in excess of 40 per 100,000 inhabitants in the city of Rio and much higher rates in some Rio favelas.<ref>The Myth of Personal Security: Criminal Gangs, Dispute Resolution, and Identity in Rio de Janeiro's Favelas. By: Arias, Enrique Desmond; Rodrigues, Corinne Davis. Latin American Politics & Society, Winter2006, Vol. 48 Issue 4, p53-81, 29p.</ref> Traffickers ensure that individual residents believe they can guarantee their own safety through their actions and political connections to them. They do this by maintaining order in the favela and giving and receiving reciprocity and respect, thus creating an environment in which critical segments of the local population feel safe despite continuing high levels of violence.
The sovereign's badge of the order consists of a white enamelled [[snow]]flake design with diamonds between each leaf, suspended from a jeweled crown. The central disc bears a [[maple leaf]] in rubies on a white enamel background, surrounded by a red enamel ring (annulus) bearing the motto of the order.<ref>[http://mikan3.archives.ca/pam/public_mikan/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=3601802&rec_nbr_list=3603379,3603378,3603377,3603375,3603374,3603370,3601802,3226036,3603382,3520147&tmplt_nbr=201&item_index=1&total_items=1& Image of the sovereign's badge on the Library and Archives Canada website]</ref>


Drug use is highly concentrated in these areas run by local gangs in each highly populated favela. Drug sales and use run rampant at night when many Favelas host their own ''baile'', or dance party, where many different social classes can be found. These drug sales make up "a business that in some of the occupied areas rakes in as much as US$ 150 million per month, according to official estimates released by the Rio media."<ref>[http://www.brazzilmag.com/content/view/5790/54/ Brazil - Brazzil Mag - Brazilian Army Caves in to Favela's Drug Dealers</ref>
The badges for inductees are of a similar design to the sovereign's badge, though without precious stones, in [[Gilding|gilt]] for Companions and Officers, and in [[silver]] for Members. The maple leaf in the central disk is in red enamel for Companions, gold for Officers, and silver for Members, and each is topped by a [[St. Edward's Crown|crown of St. Edward]], symbolizing that the order is headed by the sovereign. The reverse is plain except for the word ''CANADA''.<ref>[http://www.medals.org.uk/canada/canada001.htm Pictures of the backside of the various medal designs].</ref> The ribbon is white bordered in red stripes, similar to the [[Flag of Canada|Canadian flag]]. The chest ribbon is the same for each grade, save for a metallic [[maple]] leaf in the centre, the color of which depends on the grade that one was appointed to: [[red]] for a Companion, [[gold]] for an Officer, [[silver]] stands for Member. For civilian wear, a lapel pin is worn on the jacket, which is designed as a miniature of the medalion; an example of one being used is shown in [http://www.canadacouncil.ca/canadacouncil/archives/prizes/ggla/2004/images/winners/max/dallaire.jpg this photo] of [[Roméo Dallaire]]. The Governor General also wears a special chain during certain ceremonies, consisting of the Companion badge suspended from the shield of Canada and surmounted by [[the Crown]]. On each side, the chain is composed of two repeating elements: a white stylized snowflake and the central disc that appears on the Companion medals. At the Governor General's installation ceremony he or she is presented with the Chain of the Order of Canada and the Chain of the Order of Military Merit.


==Extant favelas==
The badge (as well as the majority of the ensuing emblems in the Canadian honour system) was designed by [[Bruce W. Beatty]], himself made a member of the order in 1990,<ref>[http://gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=2729 Bruce W. Beatty's Membership citation]</ref> and who, as of 2004, has been in attendance at every investiture ceremony since 1967.<ref>Margaret MacMillan, Marjorie Harris and Desjardins, Anne L.; ''Canada's House: Rideau Hall and the invention of a Canadian home''; Toronto: A.A. Knopf Canada with Otherwise Editions, 2004. ISBN 0-676-97675-1 page 58</ref>
The best-known favelas are those in and around Rio de Janeiro, possibly because Rio's peculiar urban geography has placed many of them up the hills that face the city's prosperous seaside neighbourhoods and tourist spots, and thus made them readily visible. They provide a dramatic illustration of the gap between poverty and [[wealth]], juxtaposed with the luxurious apartment buildings and mansions of Rio's social elite. Several hills in Rio are densely populated by favelas. In 2004, it was estimated that 19 percent of Rio's population lived within favelas. [[Rocinha]], Pavão-Pavãozinho, Parada de Lucas, Maré and Turano are some of the most famous of Rio's favelas.


[[Cidade de Deus]] (City of God), made famous in the 2002 film of the same name, is technically not a real favela, since it was originally a government-sponsored housing community designed to replace a favela, which subsequently ran down and took on many of the very social features of favelas it was intended to eradicate. Two run-down [[condominiums]] in the otherwise affluent [[Leblon]] district of [[Rio de Janeiro]] (very near [[Rocinha]]) are often sarcastically called favelas by locals. However, they are true condominiums, master-planned on deeded land with city utilities, owned individually by unit and managed by associations of their occupants. One, at the front gates of [[PUC-Rio]], was actually built by the government. The other one, south of the horse track and soccer stadium, was donated to individual favela inhabitants by a wealthy benefactor.
When wearing medals and decorations, the insignia of the Order of Canada is worn before all national orders, and nearly all other Canadian decorations; only the [[Victoria Cross (Canada)|Victoria Cross]] and the [[Cross of Valour (Canada)|Cross of Valour]] are worn before the badge of the Order of Canada. The grades of Companion and Officer have their medals worn by a neck ribbon, while the Member grade is displayed on a chest ribbon on the left side of the jacket. Originally, protocol followed the British tradition, requiring female appointees to wear their insignia on a ribbon bow positioned to the left. In 1997 regulations were altered and, with the exception of certain special occasions laid out by the Governor General, women may wear their insignia by the same means as the men.<ref>[http://gg.ca/honours/pdf/wearing_e.pdf The Canadian Honours System: Wearing Of Orders, Decorations and medals''. page 2]</ref> This method of wear is not mandatory and it is notable that current Governor General, Michaëlle Jean, has taken to displaying the order with the female bow.


==Depiction in popular culture==
The insignia may be passed down as a family heirloom, and sale is discouraged. When a member of the order is upgraded to a higher rank, that individual must return their original emblem to the Chancellery.<ref>[http://www.gg.ca/honours/nat-ord/oc/oc-con_e.asp Constitution of the Order Section 24-(3)-B]</ref> However, a number of insignias have been put up for sale, most recently in 2007 (see [[#Sale|Sale]] below). Each appointee is also granted the right to ask for a [[coat of arms]] from the [[Canadian Heraldic Authority]] if one does not already exist for them; Companions may ask the authority for the use of [[supporters]] on their personal coat of arms. The order's [[motto]], in gold lettering on a red background, is circled around the shield, while the order's badge is suspended from the base of the shield. Because the Queen is sovereign of the order, the current [[Coat of Arms of Canada]], in use since 1994, uses the red ribbon with the order's motto in gold.<ref>[http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/sc-cs/arm1_e.cfm http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/cpsc-ccsp/sc-cs/arm1_e.cfm] — Coat of Arms of Canada.</ref>
A 1963 documentary, ''[[fish need to learn how to swim]]'', marked the film debut of [[Gordon Parks]].


In his 2006 book, ''[[Shadow Cities: A Billion Squatters, A New Urban World]]'', [[Robert Neuwirth]] reports on the time he spent in the favelas as well as in squatter settlements in other parts of the world. He focuses on some of the positive aspects of life in these places and argues that many of the problems in these communities stem not from the fact that they are poor or illegal but from the way they are viewed by authorities.
{| border="1" cellpadding="4" align="center" cellspacing="0" style="background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse;"
! style="background:#efefef;" | Sovereign (Female)
! style="background:#efefef;" | Companion (Female)
! style="background:#efefef;" | Officer
! style="background:#efefef;" | Member
|-
|
|
|
|
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="4" | Ribbon Bar
|-
|
|[[Image:Order of Canada (CC) ribbon bar.png|center|]]
|[[Image:Order of Canada (OC) ribbon bar.png|center|]]
|[[Image:Order of Canada (CM) ribbon bar.png|center|]]
|-
|}
<br clear="all"/>


The 2002 film ''[[City of God (movie)|City of God]]'' placed a spotlight on favelas, chronicling the cycle of poverty, violence, and despair in a Rio de Janeiro slum (although arguably [[Cidade de Deus]] does not meet the strict definition of a favela). The documentary ''[[Bus 174]]'', also released in 2002, placed a focus on the poor conditions of favelas and their instigation of [[social stigmatization]] and [[street crime]].
==Eligibility and appointment==
{{FixBunching|beg}}


The 2005 documentary, ''[[Favela Rising]]'', directed by [[Jeff Zimbalist]], has won several awards for its daring look at life in Brazil's slums. The film focuses on the work of Anderson Sá, a former drug trafficker who establishes the music group Afro Reggae. This group aims at using music and education to better the lives of youth and prevent further growth of gangs.
{{FixBunching|mid}}
[[Image:OC-Jean.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Governor General of Canada|Governor General]] [[Michaëlle Jean]], Chancellor and Principal Companion of the Order of Canada, poses with a full group of Order of Canada appointees at the 101st investiture ceremony banquet in the Tent Room of [[Rideau Hall]], April 11, 2008.]]
{{FixBunching|end}}


The 2007 film ''[[Tropa de Elite]]'' (Elite Squad) shows the Brazilian elite force [[BOPE]] fighting against the druglord of the favela Babilônia, in 1997. The favela must be "cleaned" because [[Pope]] [[John Paul II]] would stay at the nearby Rio Archbishop's Residence during his visit to [[Rio de Janeiro]].
{{main|Appointment to the Order of Canada}}
All living Canadians are eligible for any of the three levels of the order, except federal and provincial politicians and judges while they are holding office.<ref>Canada, Finance and Corporate Service (FIN CS): [http://www.admfincs.forces.gc.ca/admfincs/subjects/cfao/018-13_e.asp CFAO 18-13: Order of Canada].</ref> After being nominated, the Advisory Council reviews each nomination and, along with the [[Governor General of Canada|Governor General]], makes the final choice of new inductees, within the limits for each grade as prescribed in the Constitution of the Order of Canada. New appointees are then formally accepted into the order at an investiture ceremony, typically conducted by the Governor General at [[Rideau Hall]], however other officials may perform the task, and the ceremony may take place in other locations.


The Brazilian television series ''[[City of Men]]'' and the [[City of Men (film)|2007 film version]] takes place in a favela.
===Advisory Council===
The task of the Advisory Council is to evaluate the nominations of potential inductees, decide if the candidates are worthy enough to be accepted into the order, and make recommendations to the Governor General, who appoints the new members. The council is chaired by the [[Chief Justice of Canada]], and includes the [[Clerk of the Privy Council (Canada)|Clerk of the Queen's Privy Council]], the Deputy Minister of [[Department of Canadian Heritage|Canadian Heritage]], the Chairperson of the [[Canada Council for the Arts]], the President of the [[Royal Society of Canada]], and the Chairperson of the [[Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada]]. Also, five members of the order sit on the council for a three year period. If a nomination involves a non-Canadian citizen, the Deputy Minister of [[Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade|Foreign Affairs]] is invited by the Advisory Council to offer evaluation. Decisions of the council, and/or new appointments and dismissals to or from the Order of Canada, are announced to the ''[[Canada Gazette]]'' and general public by the Secretary General of the Advisory Council.


The skateboarding video game ''[[Tony Hawk's Downhill Jam]]'' has a skate course in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.
The current members of the Advisory Council are:
* [[Beverley McLachlin]] <small>[[Queen's Privy Council for Canada|PC]]</small>, Chief Justice of Canada (Chair)
* [[Patricia Baird]] <small>OC OBC</small>
* [[Yvan Guindon]] <small>CM [[Royal Society of Canada|FRSC]] [[Chemical Institute of Canada|FCIC]]</small>, President, [[Royal Society of Canada]]
* [[Tom Jackson (actor)|Tom Jackson]] <small>OC</small>
* [[Karen Kain]] <small>CC</small>, Artistic Director, [[National Ballet of Canada]]<ref>Since 2004, Karin Kain has served on the Advisory Council [[ex-officio]] as chair of the Canada Council for the Arts. She resigned from the latter position in March, 2008. Since this time, vice-chair Simon Brault OC has chaired meetings of the Canada Council for the Arts. It is unclear who, if anyone, has replaced Kain on the Order of Canada Advisory Council.</ref>
* [[Judith A. LaRocque]] <small>[[Royal Victorian Order|CVO]] [[Royal Heraldry Society of Canada|FRHSC (hon)]]</small>, Deputy Minister of Canadian Heritage
* [[Daurene Lewis|Daurene E. Lewis]] <small>CM</small>
* [[Kevin G. Lynch]], Clerk of the Privy Council and Secretary to the [[Cabinet of Canada|Cabinet]]
* [[L. Jacques Ménard]] <small>OC</small>
* [[Ted Newall|J. E. (Ted) Newall]] <small>OC</small>
* [[Tom Traves]], Chairman of the Board, Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada


The street socceer video game ''[FIFA Street 2]]'' has two pitches in Brazil, one of then are in a unnamed favela of Rio de Janeiro.The pitch is called Favela.
===Honorary appointments===
As of 2008, there have been sixteen honorary appointments to non-Canadian citizens. They are as follows:


One of the levels in the PC game ''[[Counter-Strike]]'' (not included with the original game and available as a separate download) takes place in a Rio de Janeiro favela.
====Honorary companion====
* [[Nelson Mandela]]; the former President of [[South Africa]] (1998)<ref> [http://gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=271 Announcement of Nelson Mandela's appointment]</ref>
* [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon|Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother]]; former [[List of Canadian monarchs#List of Royal Consorts of Canada|Royal Consort of Canada]] (2000)<ref>[http://www.cbc.ca/news/obit/queenmother/timeline.html http://www.cbc.ca/news/obit/queenmother/timeline.html]. Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon was appointed to the order on October 31, 2000.</ref><ref>[http://gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=7732 http://gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=7732] Queen Mother's listing on the Order of Canada rolls.</ref><ref>The Queen Mother, as a member of the [[Monarchy of Canada#Canadian Royal Family|Canadian Royal Family]] was a Canadian subject but not a Canadian citizen.</ref>
* [[Frank Gehry]]; architect (2002)<ref>[http://gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=411 Announcement of Frank Gehry's honorary appointment as a Companion]</ref><ref>Gehry, though born in [[Toronto]], moved with his family to the United States in 1942, before the enactment of the Canadian Citizenship Act, 1946. However, Ghery was given Canadian citizenship again in 2002. [http://www.cbc.ca/arts/story/2003/06/16/gehry160603.html CBC News: ''Gehry named to Order of Canada''; June 17, 2003]</ref>
* [[Boutros Boutros-Ghali]]; former [[Secretary-General of the United Nations]] (2004)<ref> [http://gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=4188 Announcement of Boutros Bourtos-Ghali's investiture as an honorary companion of the order of canada]</ref>
* [[Václav Havel]]; former President of the [[Czech Republic]] (2004)
* [[Aga Khan IV]]; [[Imam]] of the [[Shia]] Imami [[Ismaili]] Muslims (2005)


The 2000 film ''[[BMW Vermelho]]'' gives an interesting insight into the economic and cultural aspects of living in a Favela from a comedic perspective when a Favela resident wins a BMW that he can neither use nor sell. http://posters.imdb.com/title/tt0275950/
====Honorary officer====
* [[John Kenneth Galbraith]]; influential American economist<ref>Galbraith was born in [[Ontario]] before the establishment of [[Canadian nationality law|Canadian citizenship]] and renounced his status as a [[British subject]] in 1937 to become a [[United States]] citizen</ref>
* [[James Hillier]]; inventor of the [[electron microscope]] (1997)
* [[Charles Dutoit]]; conductor of the [[Montreal Symphony Orchestra]] (appointed 1997, invested 2002)
* [[Tanya Moiseiwitsch]]; theatre designer for the [[Stratford Festival]] (2003)
* [[Bernard Pivot]]; French television host and culture promoter (2008)<ref>[http://gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=5365 Bernard Pivot invested as an Honorary Officer of the Order of Canada<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
* [[Charles Aznavour]]; French musician and actor (2008)<ref>[http://gg.ca/media/doc.asp?lang=e&DocID=5447 Governor General Announces New Appointments to the Order of Canada<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


In the game ''SOCOM II'' one of the areas of operation is in a Rio de Janeiro favela.
====Honorary member====
* [[Zena Sheardown]]; (appointed 1981, invested 1986) instrumental participant during the [[Canadian Caper]]<ref>Zena Sheardown was the wife of John Sheardown, a Canadian employed at the Canadian Embassy in Iran during the Iranian Revolution of 1979. At great risk to her personal safety, Mrs. Sheardown was instrumental in the success of the [[Canadian Caper]] allowing 6 American diplomats to be safely removed from the country. Sheardown was the first honorary appointment to the Order of Canada. The uniqueness of this appointment made it slow, to the point that [[Flora MacDonald]] had to ask for and receive unanimous consent from the House of Commons before the appointment was seriously considered. By the time she was invested into the Order in 1986 Mrs. Sheardown had become a Canadian citizen and the Advisory Council changed her status from honorary to substantive.</ref>
* [[Lois Lilienstein]]; member of [[Sharon, Lois & Bram]] (2003)
* [[Francis Cabot]]; horticulturist (2005)
* [[Salome Bey]]; musician (2005)


The opening scenes of Marvel and Universal Studios' 2008 film ''[[The Incredible Hulk (film)|The Incredible Hulk]]'' find main character Bruce Banner hiding out incognito in a densely-populated Brazilian favela, with an elaborate chase scene ensuing amid the rooftops and alleyways.
===Controversial appointments===
Pro-choice activist [[Henry Morgentaler]] was appointed to the Order of Canada on July 1, 2008; an act that drew criticism, including from Conservative and some Liberal members of parliament, anti-abortion groups, and religious leaders;<ref>[http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/jul/08070208.html Wagonner, Tim; ''LifeSiteNews.com'': Pro-Life Groups Horrified by Morgentaler's Appointment to the Order of Canada; July 2, 2008]</ref> Protesters marched outside of [[Rideau Hall]] on July 9, while compatriots did the same in front of [[Government House (Newfoundland and Labrador)|Government House]] in [[St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador]], home to [[Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador|that province's Lieutenant Governor]].<ref>[http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2008/07/09/nb-finn.html CBC News: ''Former N.B. lieutenant-governor to return Order of Canada in protest''; July 9, 2007]</ref> The [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]] [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto|Archbishop of Toronto]], [[Thomas Christopher Collins|Thomas Collins]], said the country's highest honour had been "debased" by admitting someone whose "[life] work has been a deadly assault upon the most helpless amongst us".<ref>[http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/jul/08070101.html] </ref> Conversely, Joyce Arthur of the [[Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada]] supported the appointment of Morgentaler, calling the decision "overdue."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5j7JZQznSoaD8Lromzq_wHKykNnrQ|title=The Canadian Press: Morgentaler proud to receive Order of Cda, says Cda set global example|accessdate=2008-07-03}}</ref> Of the situation, [[Prime Minister]] [[Stephen Harper]] stated he'd rather see the country's highest civilian honour "be something that really... brings Canadians together,"<ref>[http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080703/harper_morgentaler_080703?s_name=&no_ads= CTV News: ''Order of Canada should unite Canadians: Harper''; July 3, 2008]</ref> while Liberal Party leader [[Stéphane Dion]] said the order "should be respected and celebrated."<ref>[http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/07/02/morgentaler-reax.html CBC News: ''Morgentaler 'honoured' by Order of Canada; federal government 'not involved'''; July 2, 2008]</ref>


The first episode of season 5 from [[CSI Miami]], shows [[Lt. Horatio Caine]] and [[Eric Delko]] entering a favela. They are looking for [[Antonio Riaz]], who killed Marisol Delko, Caine's wife and Delko's sister. The reception from the locals is hostile and they retreat from the favela.
Similarly, the appointment of sex educator [[Sue Johanson]], host of the long-running ''[[Sunday Night Sex Show]]'', as a Member of the order in 2001 stirred controversy, as Johanson taught teenagers the tactics of [[safe sex]] alongside abstinence.<ref>[http://www.thestar.com/comment/article/453124 Ed.; ''Toronto Star'': A deserving recipient; July 3, 2008]</ref>


[[Image:Es2006 faveladarocinha.JPG|thumb|780px|Panoramic view of the Favela da [[Rocinha]] in [[Rio de Janeiro]].]]
===Resignation===
Resignation from the order can only take place by the member submitting, in writing, to the Secretary General of the Order of Canada, a letter notifying the Chancellery of his or her desire to quit their membership. This request must be accepted by the Governor General before the resignation can take effect.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gg.ca/honours/nat-ord/oc/oc-con_e.asp|title=The Constitution of the Order of Canada|accessdate=2008-07-20}}</ref>


==See also==
Nobody has yet resigned from the Order of Canada. However, in July 2008, [[Priesthood (Catholic Church)|Roman Catholic priest]] [[Lucien Larré]], Cardinal [[Jean-Claude Turcotte]], former police detective Frank Chauvin,<ref>[http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=35e26387-ff05-4089-9b79-88956f22111f Canwest News Service; ''The Gazette'': Windsor man to become latest to reject Order of Canada; July 10, 2008]</ref> Msgr. A. J. Goski,<ref> [http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/jul/08071118.html; "Lifesitenews": 8th Canadian to Return Order of Canada Because of Morgentaler Award] </ref> [[Gilbert Finn]], former [[Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick]], and three other anonymous recipients indicated their intentions to return their insignia of the Order of Canada in protest against abortion activist [[Henry Morgentaler]]'s appointment earlier that month.<ref> [http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/jul/08071118.html; "Lifesitenews": 8th Canadian to Return Order of Canada Because of Morgentaler Award] </ref><ref name="catholic">{{cite news|url=http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/07/08/morgentaler-order.html|title=Catholic group handing in Order of Canada over Morgentaler|date=July 8, 2008|publisher=[[CBC News]]|accessdate=2008-07-08}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2008/07/09/nb-finn.html|title=Former lieutenant-governor returns Order of Canada in protest|date=[[2008-07-09]]|publisher=[[CBC News]]|accessdate=2008-07-09}}</ref> Similarly, members of the [[Madonna House Apostolate]], an Ontario Catholic organization, indicated their intention to return the insignia of [[Catherine Doherty]], the Madonna House's late founder, who was inducted into the order in 1976.<ref name="catholic" />
*[[Ghetto]]
*[[Corti&ccedil;o]]
*[[Villa Miseria]]
*[[Pueblos j&oacute;venes]]
*[[Colonia (border settlement)]]
*[[Barrio]]
*[[Kibera]]


*[[Abahlali baseMjondolo]]
===Refusal===
*[[Township (South Africa)]]
While few have declined entry into the Order of Canada, it is not unheard of; as of 1997 1.5% of appointments offered to the order have been refused.<ref>McCreery, Christopher (2005). The Order of Canada: Its Origins, History, and Development. University of Toronto Press, pg. 209. ISBN 0802039405</ref> The identities of those individuals who have declined induction since the 1970s are kept confidential, so the full list is not publicly known. Some, however, have spoken publicly about their decisions.

Those who have declined the honour include [[Robert Weaver (editor)|Robert Weaver]] (who stated that he was critical of the "three-tier" nature of the order),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://archives.cbc.ca/on_this_day/01/02/|title=Writers' champion Robert Weaver dies: Did You Know?|publisher=[[CBC Archives]]|accessdate=2008-06-22}}</ref> [[Claude Ryan]] (declined in 1967), [[Morley Callaghan]] (declined in 1967), [[Mordecai Richler]] (declined twice), [[Marcel Dubé]], [[Roger Lemelin]], and [[Glenn Gould]] (declined in 1970).<ref name="McCreery">McCreery, pg. 210</ref> However, all the above individuals, save for Gould and Weaver, later accepted appointment into the order. Others have declined appointment on the basis of being supporters of the [[Quebec sovereignty movement]]{{ndash}} these include [[Luc-André Godbout]], [[Rina Lasnier]], and [[Genevieve Bujold]]<ref name="McCreery" />{{ndash}} while [[Alice Parizeau]], another supporter of Quebec sovereignty, was criticized for accepting entry into the order, in spite of her beliefs.

Others decline out of modesty, such as [[Victoria Cross (Canada)|Victoria Cross]] recipient [[Cecil Meritt]], who cited the fact that he already held Canada's highest decoration as a reason not to be admitted to the order.<ref name="McCreery" /> [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]], was offered appointment to the order as an honorary Companion in 1982; however, he refused on the grounds that, as the [[List of Canadian monarchs#List of Royal Consorts of Canada|consort]] of the Queen, he was a Canadian, and thus entitled to a substantive appointment rather than an honorary one. In 1993, the Advisory Council proposed an amendment to the constitution of the Order of Canada, making the sovereign's spouse automatically a Companion, but Prince Philip again refused, stating he should be appointed on his merits.<ref>[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/backgrounder/queen/stories/related02.html Valpy, Michael; ''The Globe and Mail'': The Fresh Prince; September 28, 2002]</ref> Conversely, former [[Premier of Newfoundland]] [[Joey Smallwood]] declined appointment as a Companion because he felt that, as a [[Canadian Confederation#Fathers of Confederation|Father of Confederation]], he deserved a knighthood.<ref name="McCreery" /> Smallwood was never knighted and later accepted induction as a Companion.

===Removal===
{{main|Removal from the Order of Canada}}
Members can be removed from the order if the Advisory Council feels their actions have brought the order into disrepute. In order for this to be done, the Advisory Council must agree to the removal, and then send a letter to the person telling them of their decision, and requesting a response from the person in question regarding the decision.

Those removed from the order are required to return their insignia. While there are no formal rules in place that outline a requirement for the council to retrieve the insignia, the author of ''[[The Order of Canada: Its Origins, History and Development]],'' [[Christopher McCreery]], said that since the government owns the medal and the scrolls, the [[Royal Canadian Mounted Police]] can be sent and get the items by force.<ref>[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20050713/AHENAKEW13/TPNational/Canada] Globe and Mail's article on the process of removing Ahenakew from the Order.</ref> As of 2006, only two people have been removed from the Order of Canada: [[Alan Eagleson]], who was removed from the order after being jailed for fraud in 1998,<ref>[http://archives.cbc.ca/IDCC-1-41-1493-10073/sports/alan_eagleson/ http://archives.cbc.ca/IDCC-1-41-1493-10073/sports/alan_eagleson/] CBC account on the rise and fall of Eagleson.</ref> and [[David Ahenakew]], who faced calls for his removal due to [[anti-Semitic]] comments he made in 2002.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20051028125320/http://montreal.cbc.ca/regional/servlet/View?filename=qc_mosesreax20021217 Quebec Cree Chief wants Ahenakew to lose Order of Canada]. CBC article on Ahenakew's comments and reactions.</ref>

==Additional decorations==
At certain periods, holders of the order were presented with other decorations, usually commemorative medals. Thus far, four commemorative medals have been given automatically to every living member of the Order of Canada: the [[Canadian Centennial Medal]] (1967), the [[Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal]] (1977), the [[125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal]] (1992), and the [[Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee Medal]] (2002).

==Sale==
The Constitution of the Order of Canada states that the insignia is property of [[the Crown]], which, in theory, means it cannot be sold. In practice, however, this is not the case: The first Order of Canada insignia ever sold publicly was the Companion badge of [[Major Coldwell]], who was appointed in 1967; his badge was sold at auction in 1981, an act which received criticism from government officials.<ref>McCreery, Christopher (2005). ''The Order of Canada: Its Origins, History, and Development''. University of Toronto Press, pg. 197. ISBN 0802039405</ref>

In 2007, it was revealed that one of the first ever issued insignia of the Order of Canada, a Medal of Service awarded originally to Quebec historian [[Gustave Lanctot]], was put up for sale via [[email]]. Originally, the auctioneer, who had purchased the insignia for $45 at an estate sale in [[Montreal]], and who remained anonymous, attempted to sell the insignia on [[eBay]]; however, after the bidding reached $15,000, eBay removed the item, citing its policy against the sale of government property, including "any die, seal or stamp provided by, belonging to, or used by a government department, diplomatic or military authority appointed by or acting under the authority of Her Majesty." [[Rideau Hall]] stated that selling medals was "highly discouraged," however the owner continued efforts to sell the insignia via the internet.<ref>[http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070106/medal_auction_070106/20070106?hub=Canada Canadian Press; CTV News: ''Order of Cda. medal auction to proceed by e-mail''; January 6, 2007]</ref>

In June 2008 a Member of the Order of Canada insignia (numbered 625) and an Officer of the Order of Canada insignia (numbered 709) sold at auction in Germany. The CM sold for approximately $2500.00, while the OC sold for $3500.00.

In September 2008 a Member of the Order of Canada insignia (numbered 725) was listed on ebay. After 6 days of bidding the price had risen to $2000.00 and the auction was ended by E-Bay.

==Bibliography==
* {{cite book
| last = McCreery
| first = Christopher
| authorlink = Christopher McCreery
| title = The Order of Canada: Its Origins, History and Development
| publisher = [[Toronto]]: [[University of Toronto]] Press
| year = 2005
| isbn = 0-8020-3940-5}}
:''See also: [[Orders, decorations, and medals of Canada#Bibliography|Orders, decorations, and medals of Canada: Bibliography]]''
* {{cite book
| title = The Register of Canadian Honours
| publisher = [[Toronto]]: [Canadian Almanac and Directory
| year = 1991
| isbn = 1-895021-01-4}}

==See also==
* [[Orders, decorations, and medals of the Canadian provinces]]
* [[Canadian order of precedence (decorations and medals)]]
* [[List of Canadian awards]]


'''Favelas'''
==Notes==
:*[[List of favelas in Brazil]]
{{reflist|2}}
:*[[Heli&oacute;polis]]
:*[[Rocinha]]


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.blog.ar2com.de/favela/ What is a Favela?], a podcast by 'RadioFavela - The Sound of Rio' with some quotations and definitions of favela.
{{Sisterlinks|Order of Canada}}
*[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/specials/favelas/handholding.html?hpid=topnews Life in Rio's Favelas], A photo essay from the Washington Post.
* [http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/index_e.asp?TypeID=orc Order of Canada membership list]
*[http://www.2bros.org Two Brothers Foundation/Fundação Dois Irmãos], a nonprofit organization based in the United States and Brazil whose mission is to provide educational opportunities in the favela of [[Rocinha]] in Rio de Janeiro, through local and international community service and cultural exchange.
* [http://www.gg.ca/honours/nat-ord/oc/index_e.asp Governor General's Order of Canada site]
*[http://favelinha.com Favelinha], a project in Rio de Janeiro which enables visitors to stay safely inside a favela.
* [http://www.gg.ca/honours/nat-ord/oc/oc-con_e.asp Constitution of the Order of Canada]
*[http://www.radiofavelafm.com.br Radio Favela], a [[community radio]] broadcasting from inside a favela located in [[Belo Horizonte]] ([[Minas Gerais]])
* [http://www.dnd.ca/hr/dhr-ddhr/chart/eng/home_e.asp Canadian Orders, Decorations and Military Honours]
*[http://www.ar2com.de/radiofavela-blog/?p=83 The practical urbanity of Rocinha], the biggest favela in Brazil.
* [http://archives.cbc.ca/society/celebrations/clips/13522/ CBC Archives: First Order of Canada appointments announced] (audio)
*[http://www.aopcao.org A Opção], a grassroots organization providing business consultation and training to citizens of Rio de Janeiro's Favelas.
* [http://archives.cbc.ca/society/celebrations/clips/13523/ CBC Archives: 'They desire a better country'] (video)
*[http://www.correspondent.tv/Catalogue/index.cfm?ccs=461&cs=182 Capoeira in Rio's favelas]- short freelance video on the use of Capoeira to engage youngsters in Rio de Janeiro's favelas
* [http://archives.cbc.ca/politics/language_culture/clips/757/ CBC Archives: Matheson receives Order of Canada] (video)
* [http://www.citizenvoices.gg.ca/en/videos/9 Citizen Voices: Order of Canada 100th Investiture] (video)
* [http://www.admfincs.forces.gc.ca/admfincs/subjects/cfao/018-13_e.asp Canadian Forces Administrative Order 18-13]
* [http://www.medals.org.uk/canada/canada001.htm Medals.org: Order of Canada]
* [http://www.admfincs.forces.gc.ca/admfincs/subjects/cfao/018-04_e.asp CFAO 18-4 -- Recommendations for Canadian Orders, Decorations and Military Honours]
{{featured article}}


==References==
{{Canadian Honours System}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Awards established in 1967]]
[[Category:Brazilian society]]
[[Category:1967 in Canada]]
[[Category:Informal settlements| Favela]]
[[Category:Order of Canada|*]]
[[Category:Human habitats]]
[[Category:Poverty]]
[[Category:Slums]]


[[cs:Order of Canada]]
[[de:Favela]]
[[de:Order of Canada]]
[[eo:Favelo]]
[[fr:Ordre du Canada]]
[[es:Favela]]
[[it:Order of Canada]]
[[fr:Favela]]
[[he:מסדר קנדה]]
[[it:Favela]]
[[lt:Kanados ordinas]]
[[he:פאבלה]]
[[nl:Orde van Canada]]
[[lt:Favela]]
[[ka:ფაველა]]
[[ja:カナダ勲章]]
[[ja:ファヴェーラ]]
[[no:Order of Canada]]
[[pl:Order Kanady]]
[[nl:Favela]]
[[pt:Ordem do Canadá]]
[[no:Favela]]
[[pl:Fawela]]
[[ru:Орден Канады]]
[[fi:Order of Canada]]
[[pt:Favela]]
[[sv:Order of Canada]]
[[ru:Фавела]]
[[zh:加拿大勋章]]
[[sr:Фавела]]
[[fi:Favela]]
[[sv:Favela]]

Revision as of 02:46, 12 October 2008

Vidigal, a Rio de Janeiro favela.

Favela (Portuguese and Spanish for slum) is a specifically Brazilian word for a shanty town. The majority have electricity, but in most cases it is illegally tapped from the public grid. Favelas are constructed from a variety of materials, ranging from bricks to garbage. Many favelas are very close and very cramped. They are plagued by sewage, crime and hygiene problems. Although many of the most infamous are located in Rio de Janeiro, there are favelas in almost every large or even mid-sized Brazilian town. In Rio one in every four cariocas (as Rio's inhabitants are called) lives in a favela.[1] As a general rule, Brazilian cities do not recognize the existence of favelas as a legal entity. The name originates from a species of plant with thorny leaves that grows in the semi-arid North-East region. Refugees and former soldiers involved in the Canudos Civil War (1895–1896) in Bahia would eventually settle on unreclaimed public land on a hill in Rio de Janeiro called Morro da Providência, because the government failed to provide any housing for them. There the former soldiers named their new settlement Morro da Favela, after a plant which had thrived at the site of their famous victory against the rebels.[2]

Over the years, many freed black slaves moved in, contributing to its current state of poverty by replacing refugees as the major ethnic group. However, long before the first settlement called "favela" came into being, poor blacks were pushed away from downtown into the far suburbs. Favelas were handy for them because they allowed them to be close to work, while keeping away from where they were not welcome.

Description

A favela is fundamentally different from a slum or tenement, for the poor unfortunate people that live there, primarily in terms of its origin and location. While slum quarters in other Latin American countries generally form when poorer residents from the countryside come to larger cities in search of work, and while this also occurs to some extent with favelas, the latter are unique in that they were chiefly created as large populations became displaced. [citation needed]Favelas differ from ghettos such as those in the United States in that they are racially mixed, even though blacks make up the majority of the population - that is, in Brazil it is chiefly economic forces, rather than ethnic or cultural issues, that drive people there. Although favelas were first mostly made up of most Afro-Brazilians they slowly began to consist of many European immigrants arriving in the 19th century.[3]

Shanty towns are units of irregular self-constructed housing that are typically unlicensed and occupied illegally. They are usually on lands belonging to third parties, and are most often located on the urban periphery. Shanty town residences are built randomly, although ad hoc networks of stairways, sidewalks, and simple tracks allow bpassage through them. Most favelas are inaccessible by vehicle, due to their narrow and irregular streets and walkways and often steep inclines. [citation needed]

These areas of irregular and poor-quality housing are often crowded onto hillsides, and as a result, these areas suffer from frequent landslides during heavy rain. In recent decades, favelas have been troubled by drug-related crime and gang warfare. There are often common social codes in some favelas which forbid residents from engaging in criminal activity inside their own favela.

History

File:Favela-CCBY.jpg
Precarious houses in the favela of Complexo do Alemão in Rio de Janeiro.

It is generally agreed upon that the first favela was created in November 1897 when 20,000 veteran soldiers were brought to Rio de Janeiro and left with no place to live.[4] Some of the older favelas were originally started as quilombos (independent settlements of fugitive African slaves) among the hilly terrain of the area surrounding Rio, which later grew as slaves were liberated in 1888 with no place to live. The favelas were formed prior to the dense occupation of cities and the domination of real estate interests.[5] The housing crisis of the 1940s forced the urban poor to erect hundreds of shantytowns in the suburbs, when favelas replaced tenements as the main type of residence for destitute cariocas (residents of Rio). The explosive era of favela growth dates from the 1940s, when Getúlio Vargas's industrialization drive pulled hundreds of thousands of migrants into the Federal District, until 1970, when shantytowns expanded beyond urban Rio and into the metropolitan periphery.[6] Most of the current favelas began in the 1970s, as a construction boom in the richer neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro initiated a rural exodus of workers from poorer states in Brazil. Heavy flooding in the low-lying slum areas of Rio also forcibly removed a large population into favelas, which are mostly located on Rio's various hillsides. Since favelas have been created under different terms but with similar end results, the term favela has become generally interchangeable with any impoverished areas.

Public policy towards favelas

The explosive growth of favelas triggered government removal campaigns. A program in the 1940s called Parque Proletário destroyed the original homes of favelados in Rio and relocated them to temporary housing as they waited for the building of public housing.[7] Eventually little public housing was built and the land that was cleared for it just become reoccupied with new settlements of favelados. In 1955, Dom Hélder Câmara, Archbishop of Recife and Auxiliary Bishop of Rio de Janeiro, launched the Cruzada São Sebastião (St. Sebastian's Crusade), a federally financed project to build an apartment complex in the largest favela at the time, Praia do Pinto. The goal of the Cruzada was to transform favela dwellers into more acceptable citizens by only housing those willing to give up the vices associated with favela life. One in Praia do Pinto and the other in the favela of Rádio Nacional in Parada de Lucas[8] Removal programs of the favelas flourished once again in the 1970s under the military dictatorship, disguised as a government housing program for the poor. What really happened was that more favelas were eliminated and its residents were displaced to urban territory lacking basic infrastructure.[9] the idea was to eliminate the physical existence of favelas by taking advantage of the cheaper prices of suburban land. The favela eradication program became paralyzed eventually because of the resistance of those who were supposed to benefit from the program and a distribution of income did not permit the poor to assume the economic burden of public housing that was placed on them.[10]

Formation of Favela Society

The people who live in favelas are known as favelados. As previously stated, the original favelados were of African descent, and Black Brazilians still make up the majority. However, with the influx of service and manufacturing jobs during the late 19th century in the core of Brazil's major cities, European immigrants and poor white Brazilians settled in the favelas as well. This new influx of people diversified the face of the favelado. This altered image of the favelado broadened the inequalities and discrimination associated with the favelas from simply racial inequality and discrimination to economic.[11]
Favelas are associated with immense poverty. Brazil's favelas can be seen as the result of the unequal distribution of wealth in the country. Brazil is one of the most economically unequal countries in the world with the top 10 percent of its population earning 50 percent of the national income and about 34 percent of all people living below the poverty line. The Brazilian government has made several attempts in the 20th century to improve the nation's problem of urban poverty. One way was by the eradication of the Favelas and favelados that occurred during the 1970s while Brazil was under military governance. These favela eradication programs forcibly removed over 100,000 residents and placed them in public housing projects or back to the rural areas that many emigrated from.[12] Another attempt to deal with urban poverty came by way of gentrification. The government sought to upgrade the favelas and integrate them into the inner city with the newly urbanized upper-middle class. As these "upgraded favelas" became more stable, they began to attract members of the lower-middle class pushing the former favelados onto the streets or outside of the urban center and into the suburbs further away from opportunity and economic advancement. For example: in Rio de Janeiro, the vast majority of the homeless population is black, and part of that can be attributed to favela gentrification and displacement of those in extreme poverty.[13]

Drugs and the favela

Police presence in a favela

The Colombian cocaine trade has impacted Brazil and in turn its favelas, which tend to be ruled by druglords. Regular shoot-outs between traffickers and police and other criminals, as well as assorted illegal activities, lead to murder rates in excess of 40 per 100,000 inhabitants in the city of Rio and much higher rates in some Rio favelas.[14] Traffickers ensure that individual residents believe they can guarantee their own safety through their actions and political connections to them. They do this by maintaining order in the favela and giving and receiving reciprocity and respect, thus creating an environment in which critical segments of the local population feel safe despite continuing high levels of violence.

Drug use is highly concentrated in these areas run by local gangs in each highly populated favela. Drug sales and use run rampant at night when many Favelas host their own baile, or dance party, where many different social classes can be found. These drug sales make up "a business that in some of the occupied areas rakes in as much as US$ 150 million per month, according to official estimates released by the Rio media."[15]

Extant favelas

The best-known favelas are those in and around Rio de Janeiro, possibly because Rio's peculiar urban geography has placed many of them up the hills that face the city's prosperous seaside neighbourhoods and tourist spots, and thus made them readily visible. They provide a dramatic illustration of the gap between poverty and wealth, juxtaposed with the luxurious apartment buildings and mansions of Rio's social elite. Several hills in Rio are densely populated by favelas. In 2004, it was estimated that 19 percent of Rio's population lived within favelas. Rocinha, Pavão-Pavãozinho, Parada de Lucas, Maré and Turano are some of the most famous of Rio's favelas.

Cidade de Deus (City of God), made famous in the 2002 film of the same name, is technically not a real favela, since it was originally a government-sponsored housing community designed to replace a favela, which subsequently ran down and took on many of the very social features of favelas it was intended to eradicate. Two run-down condominiums in the otherwise affluent Leblon district of Rio de Janeiro (very near Rocinha) are often sarcastically called favelas by locals. However, they are true condominiums, master-planned on deeded land with city utilities, owned individually by unit and managed by associations of their occupants. One, at the front gates of PUC-Rio, was actually built by the government. The other one, south of the horse track and soccer stadium, was donated to individual favela inhabitants by a wealthy benefactor.

Depiction in popular culture

A 1963 documentary, fish need to learn how to swim, marked the film debut of Gordon Parks.

In his 2006 book, Shadow Cities: A Billion Squatters, A New Urban World, Robert Neuwirth reports on the time he spent in the favelas as well as in squatter settlements in other parts of the world. He focuses on some of the positive aspects of life in these places and argues that many of the problems in these communities stem not from the fact that they are poor or illegal but from the way they are viewed by authorities.

The 2002 film City of God placed a spotlight on favelas, chronicling the cycle of poverty, violence, and despair in a Rio de Janeiro slum (although arguably Cidade de Deus does not meet the strict definition of a favela). The documentary Bus 174, also released in 2002, placed a focus on the poor conditions of favelas and their instigation of social stigmatization and street crime.

The 2005 documentary, Favela Rising, directed by Jeff Zimbalist, has won several awards for its daring look at life in Brazil's slums. The film focuses on the work of Anderson Sá, a former drug trafficker who establishes the music group Afro Reggae. This group aims at using music and education to better the lives of youth and prevent further growth of gangs.

The 2007 film Tropa de Elite (Elite Squad) shows the Brazilian elite force BOPE fighting against the druglord of the favela Babilônia, in 1997. The favela must be "cleaned" because Pope John Paul II would stay at the nearby Rio Archbishop's Residence during his visit to Rio de Janeiro.

The Brazilian television series City of Men and the 2007 film version takes place in a favela.

The skateboarding video game Tony Hawk's Downhill Jam has a skate course in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.

The street socceer video game [FIFA Street 2]] has two pitches in Brazil, one of then are in a unnamed favela of Rio de Janeiro.The pitch is called Favela.

One of the levels in the PC game Counter-Strike (not included with the original game and available as a separate download) takes place in a Rio de Janeiro favela.

The 2000 film BMW Vermelho gives an interesting insight into the economic and cultural aspects of living in a Favela from a comedic perspective when a Favela resident wins a BMW that he can neither use nor sell. http://posters.imdb.com/title/tt0275950/

In the game SOCOM II one of the areas of operation is in a Rio de Janeiro favela.

The opening scenes of Marvel and Universal Studios' 2008 film The Incredible Hulk find main character Bruce Banner hiding out incognito in a densely-populated Brazilian favela, with an elaborate chase scene ensuing amid the rooftops and alleyways.

The first episode of season 5 from CSI Miami, shows Lt. Horatio Caine and Eric Delko entering a favela. They are looking for Antonio Riaz, who killed Marisol Delko, Caine's wife and Delko's sister. The reception from the locals is hostile and they retreat from the favela.

Panoramic view of the Favela da Rocinha in Rio de Janeiro.

See also

Favelas

External links

References

  1. ^ RIO DE JANEIRO: Microcosm of the Future. By: Foek, Anton. Humanist, Jul/Aug2005, Vol. 65 Issue 4, p31-34, 4p.
  2. ^ Neuwirth, R (2004) Shadow Cities: A Billion Squatters, A New Urban World, Routledge ISBN 0415933196
  3. ^ Ney dos Santos Oliveira.,"Favelas and Ghettos: race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City., Latin American, vol 23 no. 4 Perspectives
  4. ^ Favelas commemorate 100 years - accessed December 25 2006
  5. ^ Ney dos Santos Oliveira., "Favelas and Ghettos:race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City"
  6. ^ Pino, Julio Cesar. Sources on the history of favelas in Brazil.
  7. ^ Ney dos Santos Oliveira., "Favelas and Ghettos: race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City"
  8. ^ Pino, Julio Cesar. Sources on the History of favelas in Brazil.
  9. ^ Ney dos Santos Oliveira., "Favelas and Ghettos:race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City"
  10. ^ Housing Policy, Urban Poverty, and the State:The Favelas of Rio de Janeiro 1972-1976]
  11. ^ Oliveira, Ney dos Santos.1996.Favelas and Ghettos: Race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City.Latin American Perspectives 23:75.
  12. ^ Perlman, Janice E,.2006.The Metamorphosis of Marginality: Four Generations in the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.606 Annals 154:2
  13. ^ Oliveira, Ney dos Santos.1996.Favelas and Ghettos: Race and Class in Rio de Janeiro and New York City.Latin American Perspectives 23:82.
  14. ^ The Myth of Personal Security: Criminal Gangs, Dispute Resolution, and Identity in Rio de Janeiro's Favelas. By: Arias, Enrique Desmond; Rodrigues, Corinne Davis. Latin American Politics & Society, Winter2006, Vol. 48 Issue 4, p53-81, 29p.
  15. ^ [http://www.brazzilmag.com/content/view/5790/54/ Brazil - Brazzil Mag - Brazilian Army Caves in to Favela's Drug Dealers