“…Recife, one of the country's most unequal state capitals, is no exception to this recurring diagnosis. Stigmatized in circulating imaginaries as sources of danger and criminality, self‐built settlements, marginalized working‐class areas, and their residents have been historically and disproportionately exposed to the risk of violence—especially when said violence is perpetrated by militarized policing forces themselves (Cavalcanti, 2020; Haynes, 2022). The 2007 managerial reform of public security carried out under the Pacto pela Vida (Pact for Life), though widely celebrated for reducing Pernambuco homicide rates between 2007 and 2013, did not structurally or durably alter this unequal reality, especially when assessed and experienced from Recife's urban margins (see Cavalcanti, 2020; Daudelin & Ratton, 2018; Haynes, 2022; Hoelscher, 2017).…”