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The Free Fall of Equilibrium: Examining The Social Justice of Rio de Janeiro’s Urban Development in Developing Strong Institutions

Garvit Sood Sood

MPRA Paper from University Library of Munich, Germany

Abstract: When I first looked at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics, my brain struggled to reconcile the official success story with the reality on the ground—my epistemic beliefs nudged me toward the feeling that the situation was amiss. This led me to uncover a deeper strategy behind Rio’s selection, exploring the political resentment that has simmered since the city lost its status as Brazil’s capital in 1960. Using my metaphor "The Free Fall of Equilibrium," I juxtapose the idea of a "free fall"—where short-term political plays cause a sharp long-term downrise—with "equilibrium," which requires a focus on stability and just principles. By examining the irony of jailed governors, Olympic bribe schemes, and the symbolic "orange" abandoned pools, I argue that Rio’s approach was not just destabilizing for the city, but for the collective nation. Ultimately, this research explores a fundamental question: is it the individual or the collective who holds the most influence? By evaluating these failures against SDG 16, I show that when institutions prioritize personal beliefs over collective ones, they inevitably collapse under their own weight.

Keywords: Rio 2016 Olympics; Urban Regeneration; SDG 16; Corruption; Epistemic Framing; Modular Technology; Institutional Development. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D02 D73 O18 O33 Z13 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-05-07, Revised 2026-05-07
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