The Orban government spent billions on Hungarian football clubs in Serbia, Romania and Slovakia Analysis The Hungarian government is financially supporting soccer wherever it can: new stadiums are being built across the country. Besides professional soccer, there is a huge amount of money spent on junior teams and training the new generations of soccer players as well. By Oroszi Babett
We were not invited to the party: Women and the World Cup Elisangela's story is one among many of women heads of families who live in favelas of Brazilian cities, and who are suffering with the forced removals being carried out give way to World Cup-related construction works. Marilene de Paula tells her story. By Marilene de Paula
To whom does the regulation of prostitution serve? Analysts believe that the sex market will be very active during the World Cup. In Brazil, prostitution is not a crime, but it is not regulated as a profession either. By Nalu Faria
In Recife, the Expropriations Were Denounced Somewhat Late Even though Recife holds the most remote stadium built for the World Cup, thousands of people were evicted from their homes. Activist Rudrigo Rafael explains how the government ignores human rights and why development projects in Recife are killing jobs. By Eduardo Amorim
The Right to the City and Forced Evictions In this interview professor Orlando Alves dos Santos Júnior (Research Institute of Urban and Regional Planning at Rio de Janeiro University), talks about the violations against citizen's rights that are happening in Brazil. By Manoela Vianna
Removals – Resistance Comes from Residents Antonieta Rodriguês is a former resident of Campinho, a community located in Madureira, north of Rio de Janeiro City. The woman lost her home and is now engaging against the removals and the injustices arising from the construction works. By Manoela Vianna
I wish I was a fish Under the justification that a huge aquarium would increase tourism, more than US$126.8 million were spent on the Acquário Ceará in Fortaleza. A questionable project for a city in which 43 percent of the inhabitants don't even have a sewage disposal system. By Sheryda Lopes
Who Is the Cup For? Expenses in the World Cup 2014 One question that concerns many Brazilians is about the true cost of the 2014 World Cup. The data gathered by the NGO PACS shows where investment money for the World Cup comes from and where it is going. It proofs how companies profit from billions of public money. By PACS - Instituto Políticas Alternativas para o Cone Sul
"Billions were spent on stadiums, now we only need to build a country around them" On the night of June 25, 2013, at least 1,000 residents of the Rocinha slum, south of Rio de Janeiro, gathered to protest. They demanded the completion of all the sanitation work in their neighbourhood, instead of an expensive transportation system for tourists. By Felipe Werneck
Recife May Need to Watch the Cup from Afar The rural community of São Lourenço in Recife was chosen as the place for the construction of a stadium and a real estate mega-project named World Cup Village. Hundreds of families were transferred without any alternatives or financial compensation. By Eduardo Amorim