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  • Food delivery courier Joao Paulo Teixeira, 20, rides his electric bike to deliver an order for the 99Food app in downtown Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 17, 2026. Brazil had 274,000 app-based delivery workers in 2024, according to the latest official data a figure experts say is far below reality. The sector has boomed since the pandemic and is coveted for its size and collective mobilization power, Nicolas Souza Santos, co-founder of Anea, told AFP. (Photo by Mauro PIMENTEL / AFP via Getty Images)

  • Delivery riders and app-based workers protest against government regulations in Sao Paulo, Brazil on April 14, 2026. Clad in Bermuda shorts and flip-flops, Joao Paulo Teixeira zips through the traffic on his electric scooter to deliver a meal in downtown Rio de Janeiro. The 20-year-old Brazilian belongs to a booming new professional class of delivery workers -- precarious by nature but increasingly organized in defense of their rights. (Photo by Miguel SCHINCARIOL / AFP via Getty Images)

  • Food delivery courier Joao Paulo Teixeira, 20, rides his electric bike to deliver an order for the 99Food app in downtown Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 17, 2026. Brazil had 274,000 app-based delivery workers in 2024, according to the latest official data a figure experts say is far below reality. The sector has boomed since the pandemic and is coveted for its size and collective mobilization power, Nicolas Souza Santos, co-founder of Anea, told AFP. (Photo by Mauro PIMENTEL / AFP via Getty Images)

  • Delivery riders and app-based workers protest against government regulations in Sao Paulo, Brazil on April 14, 2026. Clad in Bermuda shorts and flip-flops, Joao Paulo Teixeira zips through the traffic on his electric scooter to deliver a meal in downtown Rio de Janeiro. The 20-year-old Brazilian belongs to a booming new professional class of delivery workers -- precarious by nature but increasingly organized in defense of their rights. (Photo by Miguel SCHINCARIOL / AFP via Getty Images)

  • Food delivery courier Joao Paulo Teixeira, 20, talks with a taxi driver on his way to deliver an order for the 99Food app in downtown Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 17, 2026. Brazil had 274,000 app-based delivery workers in 2024, according to the latest official data a figure experts say is far below reality. The sector has boomed since the pandemic and is coveted for its size and collective mobilization power, Nicolas Souza Santos, co-founder of Anea, told AFP. (Photo by Mauro PIMENTEL / AFP via Getty Images)

  • (FILES) A man sells sorghum on the street from an old USAID bag and tin in Maban, South Sudan, on August 20, 2025. Hundreds of thousands displaced by conflict in South Sudan are increasingly forced to sell part of their rations to pay for basic needs at a time when the economy has almost entirely collapsed. One of the world's poorest countries, South Sudan has been mired in corruption and civil war for much of its existence since gaining independence in 2011. When US President Donald Trump ordered the shutdown of USAID last year, South Sudan lost a huge chunk of its humanitarian support at a time when nearly two-thirds of the population -- some 7.9 million people -- face acute hunger. (Photo by GUY PETERSON / AFP via Getty Images)

  • A mask of the president of the Chamber of Deputies, Hugo Motta, reading "Enemy of deliveries" is seen during a protest of delivery riders and app-based workers against government regulations in Sao Paulo, Brazil on April 14, 2026. Clad in Bermuda shorts and flip-flops, Joao Paulo Teixeira zips through the traffic on his electric scooter to deliver a meal in downtown Rio de Janeiro. The 20-year-old Brazilian belongs to a booming new professional class of delivery workers -- precarious by nature but increasingly organized in defense of their rights. (Photo by Miguel SCHINCARIOL / AFP via Getty Images)

  • Food delivery courier Joao Paulo Teixeira, 20, maneuvers his electric bike inside the garage of his apartment as he begins a shift delivering orders for the 99Food app in downtown Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 17, 2026. Brazil had 274,000 app-based delivery workers in 2024, according to the latest official data a figure experts say is far below reality. The sector has boomed since the pandemic and is coveted for its size and collective mobilization power, Nicolas Souza Santos, co-founder of Anea, told AFP. (Photo by Mauro PIMENTEL / AFP via Getty Images)

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