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Rio Voted Friendliest City


Guest Gringo
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Guest Gringo

Before you suggest it, I've already checked the archives. About a year or so ago, there was an article in a travel magazine, maybe Frommer's, that rated Rio as the friendliest city in the world. I mentioned this to a friend who is interested, but apprehensive about traveling to Rio, and he would like to read the article. Does anyone have a recollection of this article and how I can locate it? Thanks

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>About a year or so ago, there was an article in a travel

>magazine that rated Rio as the friendliest

>city in the world. Does anyone have a

>recollection of this article and how I can locate it? Thanks

 

________________________________________

 

The website for the article is at:

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3002308.stm

 

The article is:

 

Rio is 'world's friendliest city'

 

By Victoria Harrison

BBC News

 

 

 

Despite its violent reputation Rio scored highly for friendliness

 

A study published in the New Scientist magazine says the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro is the friendliest in the world.

 

A team of social psychologists from California spent six years assessing the reactions of the local populations of cities around the world to different situations.

 

And now they have finally published their list of the good and the bad.

 

But what makes one city more friendly than another?

 

The psychologists, from California State University, say it has got more to do with the environment we live in than our cultural or ethnic background.

 

FRIENDLIEST CITIES

1. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

2. San Jose, Costa Rica

3. Madrid, Spain

 

They carried out a study into the way locals treated strangers in 23 cities around the world.

 

The team conducted their research through a series of "helpfulness" tests, such as dropping pens, feigning blindness or an injury and leaving stamped addressed envelopes in the street.

 

The results showed that the poorer, less stable cities generally had the friendlier, more open populations.

 

Rio de Janeiro in Brazil - more often known for its violence and crime - came out top.

 

Latin American cities in general fared well, as did Spain's capital Madrid.

 

'Stimulus overload'

 

But cities such as Kuala Lumpur, New York, Singapore and Amsterdam were deemed the least friendly.

 

Locals here helped out the researchers in less than half of their cases.

 

The study concluded that people were more helpful in less dense and more laidback cities.

 

The psychologists say their research supports the theory of "stimulus overload", which states that in overcrowded, fast-paced cities people often deal with their surroundings by ignoring emergency situations and depersonalising strangers.

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