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Caring for others, taking care of water: gender and race in the production of the city1 1 This work was produced in dialogue with members of the Urban Infrastructure Study Group, linked to the Casa (IESP/UERJ), Urbano - Laboratory of City Studies (UFRJ) and ResiduaLab - Laboratory of Social Studies of Waste (UERJ) research groups. For reading the text and their comments, we thank Ana Clara Chequetti, Daniela Petti, Diego Francisco, Júlia Kovac, Julia O’Donnell, Marcella Araujo, Marcos Campos, Maria Raquel Passos Lima, Mariana Cavalcanti, Michel Misse Jr., Mayra Luiza, Perry Maddox, Rodrigo Agueda and Thomas Cortado, who added considerably to the text. We especially thank Júlia Kovac for organizing the comments received, essential to writing the article’s conclusion. The names of the people present in the text are fictitious in order to guarantee their anonymity.

ABSTRACT

This article discusses the importance of water in the daily lives of women living in favelas and squatter settlements in the city of Rio de Janeiro, articulating the debates on urban infrastructure and careful thinking about the gendered and racialized ways of making cities. Through small domestic events, dialogues between the authors and their interlocutors, and more extensive ethnographic descriptions, the article shows how water bears the power of the ordinary and is one of the objects that allow us to see the potency and vulnerability of daily life in terms of gender, class, and race. It describes women’s work in the processes of city-making by relating the precarious access to water with the subordination of care as coexisting aspects that make visible the conditions of profound inequality of the residents of peripheries.

KEYWORDS:
Water; Infrastructure; Care; Gender; Race; City

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