4,157 results
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2. Evolution and characterization of health sciences paper retractions in Brazil and Portugal.
- Author
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Candal-Pedreira, Cristina, Ruano-Ravina, Alberto, Rey-Brandariz, Julia, Mourino, Nerea, Ravara, Sofia, Aguiar, Pedro, and Pérez-Ríos, Mónica
- Subjects
FRAUD in science ,DATABASES ,RETRACTORS (Surgery) ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
The retraction of health sciences publications is a growing concern. To understand the patterns in a particular country-context and design specific measures to address the problem, it is important to describe and characterize retractions. We aimed to assess the evolution of health science retractions in Brazil and Portugal and to describe their features. We conducted a cross-sectional study including all health sciences retracted articles with at least one author affiliated to a Portuguese or Brazilian institution identified through Retraction Watch database. A total of 182 retracted articles were identified. The number of retractions increased over time, but the proportion related to the whole of publications remained stable. A total of 50.0% and 60.8% of the Portuguese and Brazilian retracted articles, respectively, were published in first and second quartile journals. Scientific misconduct accounted for 60.1% and 55.9% of retractions in Brazil and Portugal. In both countries, the most frequent cause of misconduct was plagiarism. The time from publication to retraction decreases as the journal quartile increases. The retraction of health sciences articles did not decrease over time in Brazil and Portugal. There is a need to develop strategies aimed at preventing, monitoring and managing scientific misconduct according to the country context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Access, health, re‐conhecimento: Co‐crafted Brazilian discourses on sustainable food.
- Author
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Afonso, Rita, Sarayed‐Din, Luiza, Kleine, Dorothea, Carvalho, Cristine, Bartholo, Roberto, and Hughes, Alex
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE consumption ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,FOOD consumption ,RIGHT to health ,FOOD sovereignty - Abstract
Academic discourse on food justice and sustainable food consumption needs to be informed by empirical contributions and heterogenous conceptualisations from diverse parts of the world. This paper broadens the dialogue with a variety of voices and knowledges, rooting itself not only in the specific political and social context, but also the discursive and epistemic traditions of Brazil, which stand in dialogue with international discourses. Firstly, an analysis is offered of the multi‐stakeholder process that since the mid‐1990s shaped the discourse, theorisation and policy making on food justice and sustainable food consumption in Brazil. Emerging from this process were globally leading Brazilian policy initiatives such as Zero Hunger, the School Feeding Program, the progressive Food Guide, and co‐crafted concepts such as comida de verdade. The institutional architecture for this discourse, the National Food Council and regular conferences, were dismantled in 2019 after a change in government. Secondly, the paper presents data from 30 interviews with key stakeholders from civil society, policy, business, media and celebrity influencers, conducted at the time of the dissolution. Three key subdiscourses on sustainable food consumption emerge: access, with an emphasis on right to food; health; and re‐conhecimento, a term we use to articulate the confluence of multiple knowledges and consciousnesses, including an insistence on the cultural role of food. Throughout the interviews, co‐crafted concepts and phrases emerging from the multistakeholder process reverberated. The paper argues that the multi‐stakeholder process resulted not just in a coherent shared discourse, concepts and policy during a period of conducive policy environment, but also in collective resilience. The invisible edifice of shared ideas and commitments around this public issue is still intact and may be reactivated in future. In times of increased political polarisation, not just in Brazil, this is an important argument for investing in such long‐term multi‐stakeholder dialogue processes. This paper analyses the distinct multi‐stakeholder process which shaped the discourse, theorisation and policy making on food justice and sustainable food consumption in Brazil. It presents data from 30 interviews with key stakeholders, from which three sub‐discourses emerge: access; health; and re‐conhecimento. The paper argues that although the multi‐stakeholder forums crafting this discourse were dismantled in 2019 after a change in government, the process of co‐crafting has resulted in key concepts and a shared vision which demonstrate collective epistemic resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Underestimating the Pandemic: The Impact of COVID-19 on Income Distribution in the U.S. and Brazil.
- Author
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Alfani, Federica, Clementi, Fabio, Fabiani, Michele, Molini, Vasco, and Schettino, Francesco
- Subjects
INCOME distribution ,TELECOMMUTING ,COVID-19 pandemic ,VIRAL transmission ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed individuals to various risks, including job loss, income reduction, deteriorating well-being, and severe health complications and death. In Brazil and the U.S., as well as in other countries, the initial response to the pandemic was marked by governmental underestimation, leading to inadequate public health measures to curb the spread of the virus. Although progressively mitigated, this approach played a crucial role in the impacts on local populations. Therefore, the principal aim of this paper is to evaluate the impact of COVID-19 and, indirectly, of the policies adopted by the U.S. and the Brazilian governments to prevent pandemic diffusion on income distribution. Utilizing available microdata and employing novel econometric methods (RIF-regression for inequality measures) this study shows that growth in COVID-19 prevalence significantly exacerbates economic disparities. Furthermore, the impact of COVID-19 on inequality has increased over time, suggesting that this negative impact has been intensifying. In the U.S., results indicate that working from home, the inability to work, and barriers to job-seeking significantly increase inequalities. Although further data are necessary to validate the hypothesis, this preliminary evidence suggests that the pandemic has significantly contributed to increased inequality in these two countries already characterized by increasing polarization and significant social disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Agri-food globalization and food security in Brazil: recent trends and contradictions.
- Author
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Flexor, Georges, Kato, Karina Yoshie, and Leite, Sergio Pereira
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FOOD security ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,FARM produce ,COMMODITY exchanges ,FOOD marketing - Abstract
The article analyzes the interrelationships between international commodity markets and food security in Brazil. Through bibliographical research, document analysis, and data visualization, this paper illustrates the key connections between the dynamics of agricultural commodity markets, the growth of commodity production in Brazil, and the behavior of food prices in Brazil. Greater integration of the Brazilian food market with the global food market not only raises land use and environmental concerns, but also requires a discussion of development strategies that can ensure national food. The paper's conclusion emphasizes the need for greater understanding of the ongoing dynamics and their local effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Technical-scientific production and knowledge networks about medicinal plants and herbal medicines in the Amazon.
- Author
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Lepsch-Cunha, Nadja, Muraro, Vinicius, Mendonça Nascimento, Henrique Eduardo, Mazoni, Alysson, Nunez, Cecília Verónica, and Machado Bonacelli, Maria Beatriz
- Subjects
HERBAL medicine ,TECHNOLOGY assessment ,MEDICINAL plants ,NATURAL language processing ,BIBLIOMETRICS - Abstract
Introduction: This paper explores the role of Brazilian research institutions in the global and national context of study of medicinal plants. Most of these plants have ethnopharmacological use and herbal medicines related to the Amazon. It highlights Brazil’s position in scientific production and the importance of Amazonian resources in developing phytomedicines. The study aims to provide an overview of the technical-scientific production of medicinal plants and herbal medicines related to the Amazon, focusing on scientific impact, collaboration, Technology Readiness Level (TRL) of scientific production, and innovation system maturity. Methods: The study employs a comprehensive methodological approach, including data collection from Scopus covering the period from 2002 to 2022. The data was cleaned and analyzed using bibliometric and network analysis techniques. Advanced natural language processing techniques, such as Latent Dirichlet Allocation and Jaccard distance measure, were used for TRL classification. Results: The findings reveal a predominant contribution from Brazilian institutions and authors, with 1,850 publications analyzed. Key areas identified include Pharmacology, Toxicology, Pharmaceuticals, Medicine, and Biochemistry. The study also uncovers various collaborative networks and technological maturity levels, with a significant focus on early-stage development phases. Discussion: The research concludes that Brazilian institutions, particularly those in the Amazon region, play a significant role in the scientific exploration and development of medicinal plants and herbal medicines. Despite this, countries like the USA were proportionally more productive in clinical trial research. The study underscores the potential of Brazil’s rich biodiversity and traditional knowledge in the pharmaceutical industry, particularly for neglected diseases. It suggests the need for stronger research systems and international collaboration to leverage these resources for global health benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. THE CHALLENGES OF DISSEMINATING CONSTRUCTIVIST MARKET STUDIES IN BRAZIL:A POSITION PAPER PRESENTING STRATEGIES TO OVERCOME THE OBSTACLES.
- Author
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David Vieira, Francisco Giovanni
- Subjects
MARKETING - Abstract
Copyright of Organizações Rurais & Agroindustriais is the property of Organizacoes Rurais & Agroindustriais and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The financing of innovation policies in Brazil between 1999 and 2016: political economy, institutions and financial cycles.
- Author
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Tavares, João Marcos Hausmann
- Subjects
FINANCIAL institutions ,BUSINESS cycles ,ECONOMIC policy ,BUDGET process ,POLITICAL change - Abstract
The main objective of the present paper is to provide the reasons behind the rise and fall of resources for innovation policies in Brazil between 1999 and 2016. The paper also intends to provide a broad map of the financial relations between funding sources and financial agents in the Brazilian National System of Innovation (NSI). In order to do that, the paper uses mixed methods: a historical approach to cover the motivations of the political economy; principles of network analyses to map the institutional relations between funding sources and financial agents; and economic theory to understand the determinants of the cash flows that finance science, technology and innovation (STI) policies. The institutional arrangement of the Brazilian NSI led the financial cycle to rely, on a general level, on GDP dynamism; the strategy of selected public bodies; on the federal budget decision process; and on the external economic cycle. Between 2003 and 2014, political struggles led to economic policies that favoured GDP growth and public spending, while the opposite occurred from 2015 onwards. In general, institutions were not equipped to protect the financial resources from the political changes of the mid-2010s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. How art market actors experience market emergence in an unequal field: placing Brazilian contemporary art in the global art market.
- Author
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Brandellero, Amanda
- Subjects
ART industry ,RELATIONSHIP marketing ,EXPORT marketing ,PAPER arts ,MARKETING literature - Abstract
This paper contributes to art marketing and consumption literature by studying how art market participants from Brazil – a market considered "emergent" – position themselves in the global art market. Drawing on qualitative interviews with 60 art market participants and participant observation in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, the paper shows how position and validation gains are understood as entailing practices of (ex)change (or troca in Portuguese) at the individual and field level. Beyond the extension of their social networks and circulation in art market circuits outside Brazil, art market participants understood their positioning gains as dependent on changes to (the perceptions of) art market practices and operating context, and the negotiation of alternative valuations of Brazilian contemporary art in the global art market, addressing power inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. CONSTITUTIONAL ATOMIC BOMB OR PAPER TIGER? THE INSTITUTION OF IMPEACHMENT IN THE FEDERATIVE REPUBLIC OF BRAZIL.
- Author
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SAWICKA, Monika
- Subjects
ATOMIC bomb ,IMPEACHMENTS ,IMPEACHMENT of presidents ,HEADS of state - Abstract
Over the course of less than a quarter of a century, two Brazilian Heads of State – Fernando Collor in 1992 and Dilma Rousseff in 2016 – have been removed from office by impeachment. There has been much controversy surrounding both proceedings, particularly the latter. The article seeks to discuss briefly the history of the proceeding of impeachment in Brazil and its significance for the country’s political life after 1988. Through an analysis of the impeachment cases of President Fernando Collor and President Dilma Rousseff, and overview of the literature on impeachment in Latin America, the paper will address the similarities and differences present in both cases in which a Brazilian Head of State was removed from office. The last part of the article will further discuss the disputes among Brazilian jurists triggered by differing evaluations of this legal measure and, in particular, the more recent case of its implementation in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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11. Teaching Social Entrepreneurship in Higher Education: Active Pedagogy in a Deweyan Perspective.
- Author
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Pischetola, Magda and Martins, Luiza de Souza e Silva
- Subjects
SOCIAL entrepreneurship ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP education ,HIGHER education ,SOCIALIZATION ,SOCIAL change ,ACTIVE learning - Abstract
Social entrepreneurship education has achieved academic recognition as a subject matter and field of research. However, there is no consensus about how this subject should be taught. The paper explores the potential of active pedagogy for social entrepreneurship education, presenting a Deweyan perspective focussed on reflection and ownership of learning. It draws on a three-year interinstitutional project that aimed at disseminating active pedagogy among in-service teachers in Latin America, and it presents the case of a Brazilian university, where the project was implemented. Findings show that reflecting on concrete cases regarding local social issues triggered students' empathy and fostered proactive attitudes. By using reflection-based active pedagogy, participant teachers developed a higher level of awareness about their need for constant self-assessment. The paper concludes that social entrepreneurship education can benefit from a stronger focus on empowerment, as a first step for social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. A construção da sociedade neoliberal brasileira: qual o lugar da democracia?
- Author
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Delmiro Machado, Ana Victória, Prado Verbicaro, Loiane, Monteiro Rebelo, Thayná, and Pinto Ferreira, Valeska Dayanne
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SOCIAL systems ,POLITICAL systems ,DEMOCRACY ,EQUALITY ,NEOLIBERALISM ,FINANCIALIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Direito e Práxis is the property of Editora da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (EdUERJ) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. "I Thought I Was Going to Die like Him": Racial Authoritarianism and the Afterlife of George Floyd in the United States and Brazil.
- Author
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Swift, Jaimee A.
- Subjects
KILLINGS by police ,RACE discrimination ,AFTERLIFE ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,BLACK feminists - Abstract
This paper offers a brief yet comprehensive comparative analysis of historical and contemporary racial authoritarian violence in the United States and Brazil. Utilizing Black feminist historian and literary scholar Saidiya Hartman's theorization of the "afterlife of slavery" and Michael Dawson's linked fate, I examine how the processes of racialization and the racial logics of subordination have and continue to shape the contours of Black life in the United States and in Brazil. Moreover, in this work, I interrogate the afterlife of George Floyd and the afterlives of Black Brazilian victims and survivors of racial authoritarian violence; the political, transnational, and symbolic impacts of Floyd's death; and Diasporic understandings of linked fate on racial authoritarian violence between Black communities in the United States and in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. MONITORAMENTO IN SITU DE PARÂMETROS AMBIENTAIS NO SÍTIO ARQUEOLÓGICO CAMINHO DA CAIÇARA II, BRASIL.
- Author
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Duarte Cavalcante, Luis Carlos, das Neves Beserra, Andre Luiz, and Sousa Bezerra da Silva, Heralda Kelis
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,WIND speed ,ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring ,ACTION & adventure films ,ATMOSPHERIC temperature ,PETROGLYPHS ,ROCK paintings - Abstract
Copyright of Arqueología Iberoamericana is the property of Arqueologia Iberoamericana and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
15. LAJEDO DO RIACHO BRAÇO FORTE: UM REPOSITÓRIO DE MARCAS ANTIGAS DE ATIVIDADE HUMANA NO CAMINHO DAS ÁGUAS, BRASIL.
- Author
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Duarte Cavalcante, Luis Carlos, Lima de Sousa, José Weverton, Sousa Bezerra da Silva, Heralda Kelis, and Campelo Magalhães, Sônia Maria
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RIVER channels ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,RECREATION areas ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL expeditions ,RURAL geography ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL finds - Abstract
Copyright of Arqueología Iberoamericana is the property of Arqueologia Iberoamericana and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
16. Estimating Cotton Yield in the Brazilian Cerrado Using Linear Regression Models from MODIS Vegetation Index Time Series.
- Author
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de Siqueira, Daniel A. B., Vaz, Carlos M. P., da Silva, Flávio S., Ferreira, Ednaldo J., Speranza, Eduardo A., Franchini, Júlio C., Galbieri, Rafael, Belot, Jean L., de Souza, Márcio, Perina, Fabiano J., and das Chagas, Sérgio
- Subjects
REGRESSION analysis ,TIME series analysis ,SEA Island cotton ,MODIS (Spectroradiometer) ,STANDARD deviations - Abstract
Satellite remote sensing data expedite crop yield estimation, offering valuable insights for farmers' decision making. Recent forecasting methods, particularly those utilizing machine learning algorithms like Random Forest and Artificial Neural Networks, show promise. However, challenges such as validation performances, large volume of data, and the inherent complexity and inexplicability of these models hinder their widespread adoption. This paper presents a simpler approach, employing linear regression models fitted from vegetation indices (VIs) extracted from MODIS sensor data on the Terra and Aqua satellites. The aim is to forecast cotton yields in key areas of the Brazilian Cerrado. Using data from 281 commercial production plots, models were trained (167 plots) and tested (114 plots), relating seed cotton yield to nine commonly used VIs averaged over 15-day intervals. Among the evaluated VIs, Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) and Triangular Vegetation Index (TVI) exhibited the lowest root mean square errors (RMSE) and the highest determination coefficients (R
2 ). Optimal periods for in-season yield prediction fell between 90 and 105 to 135 and 150 days after sowing (DAS), corresponding to key phenological phases such as boll development, open boll, and fiber maturation, with the lowest RMSE of about 750 kg ha−1 and R2 of 0.70. The best forecasts for early crop stages were provided by models at the peaks (maximum value of the VI time series) for EVI and TVI, which occurred around 80–90 DAS. The proposed approach makes the yield predictability more inferable along the crop time series just by providing sowing dates, contour maps, and their respective VIs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Making soil in the Plantationocene.
- Author
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Ofstehage, Andrew
- Subjects
SOIL management ,REAL property sales & prices ,ETHNOLOGY research ,SOILS ,PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Based on 14 months of ethnographic research, this paper analyzes soil management within the plantation model of farmingin order to understand the extent to which life on large-scale monocultural farms can be controlled and directed toward extractiveproduction. Transnational soy farmers in Western Bahia Brazil 'correct' soils in the region to make them productive and marshal thisagronomic work to claim that they have added value to the land by 'building it up'. Still, the permeability of the plantation keepstransnational farmers from achieving their dreams of control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Economic freedom and foreign direct investment in Brazil: an empirical analysis of determinants and policy implications.
- Author
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Upadhyaya, Kamal and Barreto de Góes, Bruno
- Subjects
ECONOMIC liberty ,FOREIGN investments ,POLICY analysis ,ECONOMIC impact ,GROSS domestic product ,ECONOMETRIC models - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to study the impact of economic freedom and some key macroeconomic variables on the foreign direct investment (FDI) inflow in Brazil. Design/methodology/approach: An econometric model is developed that includes FDI inflow as the dependent variable and macroeconomic variables such as the output, current account balance, the real exchange rate, openness and economic freedom as explanatory variables. Annual time series data from 1995 to 2022 is used. Before carrying out the estimation, the time series properties of the data are diagnosed using unit root tests and cointegration tests. Since the data series were found to be stationary in the first difference form and the variables in the model were cointegrated, an error correction model is developed and estimated. Findings: The findings demonstrate that the size of the market (gross domestic product), current account balance and the economic freedom index significantly influence FDI inflow to Brazil. Although the signs of openness and the real exchange rate align with theoretical expectations, they do not attain statistical significance. Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first formal study on the impact of economic freedom on the FDI inflow in Brazil. The finding of this study adds value to the understanding of FDI dynamics in Brazil, highlighting the critical role of economic freedom and market size in attracting foreign investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. 'The same contract that is suitable for your Excellency': Immigration and emulation in the adoption of sharecropping‐cum‐debt arrangements in Brazil (1835‒80).
- Author
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Witzel de Souza, Bruno Gabriel
- Subjects
SHARECROPPING ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,PEONAGE ,SHARECROPPERS - Abstract
This paper studies the history of contractual choice in coffee plantations of São Paulo, Brazil. It focuses on the consolidation of non‐captive labour markets in the early phases of the transition from slavery in the country, particularly in the 1840s–50s. Vis‐à‐vis the alternatives of fixed rents and fixed payments per time worked or piece rates, the paper examines the rationale for the adoption of sharecropping arrangements with European bonded labourers. New archival evidence suggests that sharecropping had no obvious productivity advantage over alternative labour–rental arrangements in this period, and that the adoption of sharecropping arrangements resulted from the positional advantage of its first proposers, who influenced later choices of contractual design. A credit‐labour tie‐up long outlived the original sharecropping arrangements, in turn allowing for the immigration of poor and credit‐constrained Europeans, paving the way to insert Brazil into the circuits of mass migration without promoting institutional reforms to attract non‐bonded immigrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Popular knowledge as popular power: struggle and strategy of the Emancipa popular education movement in Brazil.
- Author
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Vasconcelos, Joana Salém, Rosário, Naiara do, Ribeiro, Tatiane, and Cordeiro, Paula Maíra
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POPULAR education ,SOCIAL movements ,ANTI-racism ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,SOCIAL injustice - Abstract
This paper is a written dialogue among four activists from the Emancipa Popular Education Movement in Brazil, following the principles of Freirean pedagogy as a 'circle of culture'. It delves into how popular knowledge can be experienced as popular power, narrating the history, struggles, and strategies employed by the Emancipa movement in their pursuit of democratizing Brazilian universities. The discussion is set within the context of Latin American structural inequalities and the issue of educational exclusion in Brazil. It emphasizes the vital role of contesting culture and knowledge as part of the movement's fight against social injustices perpetuated by peripheral capitalism, including racist violence and gender oppression. The paper adopts emancipatory pedagogy as the method to empower and mobilize grassroots efforts in this transformative endeavour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Resilience to Shrinking as a Catch-Up Strategy: a Comparison of Brazil and Indonesia, 1964–2019.
- Author
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Axelsson, Tobias and Martins, Igor
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DEVELOPMENT economics ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
Development economics has long focused on growth patterns to explain countries' ability to catch up and forge ahead. We argue, however, that resilience to economic shrinking matters more. Using the examples of Brazil and Indonesia, we propose that a framework consisting of social capabilities—namely structural transformation, autonomy, and inclusion—can explain why Indonesia is more resilient to economic shrinking than Brazil and why the country is more likely to be successful in its catching-up process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Migrants' entangled socio-political and biological lives during the COVID-19 emergency in Brazil.
- Author
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de Castro, Flávia Rodrigues, Zapata, Gisela P., and Vera Espinoza, Marcia
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IMMIGRANTS ,PANDEMICS ,CORONAVIRUSES ,WORLD health - Abstract
For migrants in Brazil, the COVID-19 global health crisis meant a considerable worsening of living conditions, with increased basic material needs. The reduction of individuals' existence to the mere search for survival had important repercussions on the activities of civil society organisations (CSOs) in the country, whose work became increasingly focused on the distribution of emergency assistance for these populations. Drawing on 25 interviews with actors from CSOs, this paper unpacks the entanglement between the political and the biological aspects of migrants' lives. It argues that the pandemic brought to the fore the prominence of biological life to the detriment of migrants' political and social lives in humanitarian responses to the health crisis. In this context, CSOs working with migrant populations in Brazil were pushed to reaffirm this dichotomy, while also contesting and reminding us that the impoverishment of migrants' political and social lives can endanger the biological life that they meant to prioritise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Lula, the people's guy: populism, liberal democracy and voting in Brazil.
- Author
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Mandache, Luminiţa-Anda
- Subjects
POPULISM ,POLITICAL parties ,POLITICAL campaigns ,POLITICAL culture ,DEMOCRACY - Abstract
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with Workers' Party supporters in Northeast Brazil, and analysis of electoral campaign materials, I show that left-wing populist discourse can activate aspects of a traditional and apparently illiberal political culture that are compatible with liberal democracy, particularly the principles and ideals of representation, accountability and redistribution of economic growth. By political culture, I refer to the intersection between, on the one hand, cultural aspects such as religion, power relations rooted in history and life trajectories dictated by political and economic constraints, and, on the other hand, political discourses, leaders and policies. Moreover, I show that Workers' Party voters are not irrational actors, as some scholars of populism argue, but vote for politicians and parties that radically transformed their lives. Using Northeast Brazil as a case study, the paper contributes to debates about the relationship between populism and liberal democracy, showing how the two are not incompatible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Like the swing of the pendulum: The history of government-sponsored rural settlements in São Paulo, Brazil (1820s–1920s).
- Author
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Witzel de Souza, Bruno Gabriel
- Subjects
PENDULUMS ,PROPERTY rights ,RURAL development ,PUBLIC lands - Abstract
This paper studies the history of government-sponsored rural settlements in the province/state of São Paulo, Brazil, as a pendular movement, whose points of reversion depended on the interests of a landowning elite to obtain labour for newly expanding plantations from the 1820s to the 1920s. Faltering infrastructure and ill-defined property rights over public lands were persistent constraints to the development of such rural settlements. Part of this failure can be attributed to a lack of State capacity and part to the opposition of plantation owners to the settling of independent smallholdings. The paper complements this historical-institutional analysis with a quantitative description of such settlements in 1898–1920. These late government-sponsored rural settlements showed the potential to grow in demographic and economic terms and had an overall demographic and occupational composition well aligned with the goal of creating a family-based peasantry. However, there were enormous heterogeneities in ethno-linguistic composition, educational attainment, and economic prosperity between and within such rural settlements, which point to idiosyncratic features that should be taken into account in future research assessing the short- and long-run effects of immigration and settlement policies in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Credit Rationing and Race in Two Brazilian Cities.
- Author
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Paixão, Marcelo
- Subjects
CREDIT control ,RACE discrimination ,COMMERCIAL credit ,CITIES & towns ,LOANS - Abstract
This paper analyzes a survey of individual microentrepreneurs' (MEI) access to credit for business, broken down by their color or race in two Brazilian cities: Rio de Janeiro and Salvador. The central hypothesis of this study was that color or race is a significant predictor for credit rationing in both cities. However, the most crucial variables to explain the difference in credit approval were primarily related to credit risk operation—adverse selection, moral hazard, and collateral—as expressed by predictor: loan size and credit restriction (inversely correlated to odds of credit approval). The city of the loan operation had a robust explanatory power, with credit more accessible in Rio de Janeiro than in Salvador. Evidence of racial discrimination in the credit markets for business affected not all Afro-Brazilian MEI but blacks compared with white and brown MEI. Lenders could treat potential borrowers based on a pigmentocratic pattern, with this issue appearing more clearly in Rio de Janeiro. Further inquiries in this realm are recommended, preferably with a larger sample and a survey covering all Brazilian domestic territory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Venture capital industry emergence and development in India and Brazil: the role of the state and challenges for the Global South countries.
- Author
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Gonzalo, Manuel, Guimaraes Alves, Nathalia, Federico, Juan, Szapiro, Marina, and Kantis, Hugo
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,VENTURE capital ,COUNTRIES ,INFORMAL sector - Abstract
Most governments around the world are fostering innovation and entrepreneurial systems with a prominent role for venture capital (VC) support policies. However, the debate about the role and impact of VC support policies is still focused on the countries of the Global North. In this context, this paper seeks to describe and analyse the role that the state has played in the emergence and development of the VC industry in India and Brazil, two of the biggest economies of the Global South. We adopt a systemic and evolutionary perspective under the general context of a renewed role for the state in financing innovation. We offer interesting questions and implications to discuss the challenges, scale and impact that could be expected from VC industry support policies in the Global South countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Digital Learning and Higher Education in Brazil: A Multicultural Analysis.
- Author
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Ivenicki, Ana
- Subjects
DIGITAL learning ,MULTICULTURAL education ,HIGHER education ,DISTANCE education ,CRITICAL thinking - Abstract
The present paper discusses higher education and the role of digital learning in the Brazilian context. Using a social justice, multicultural perspective, it argues that effective digital learning in higher education is likely to happen when digital curricular contents have been embedded with inclusionary strategies that foster plural students' critical thinking and empowerment. To develop the argument, it firstly discusses the multicultural nature of Brazilian society and the relevance of conceptualizing digital learning and multicultural perspectives in education. It then highlights the higher education system and structure in Brazil, discussing how remote digital learning has been taking place in that system. It also depicts how digital learning in higher education has been conceived in Brazilian educational policies, both before, and as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Analysis of asset management difficulties observed in Brazilian firms: a study based on expert survey and fuzzy TOPSIS.
- Author
-
da Cruz, Marcelo Miguel, Caiado, Rodrigo Goyannes Gusmão, Sigahi, Tiago F.A.C., Anholon, Rosley, Quelhas, Osvaldo L.G., and Rampasso, Izabela Simon
- Subjects
ASSET management ,TOPSIS method ,FUZZY clustering technique ,HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) ,DIGITAL asset management ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper was to understand the difficulties related to asset management observed by experts in Brazilian organizations in light of the requirements outlined in the ISO 55001:2014 standard. Design/methodology/approach: A survey was performed with asset management experts. The collected data were analyzed using frequency analysis, hierarchical cluster analysis and fuzzy technique for order preference by similarity to deal solution (TOPSIS). Findings: Based on data analysis, the most critical difficulties observed were related to managing and controlling the impact of changes in the company that affect asset management objectives; to the committing to and supporting the asset management system by the top management of the organization; to manage the processes for dealing with risks and opportunities for the asset management system and plans, and correcting failures in asset performance; and to plan and conduct actions in an integrated manner to identify and minimize adverse impacts associated with the asset management system, and afterwards verifying their effectiveness. Originality/value: The findings of this study have important theoretical and practical contributions, since they indicate the most critical points observed in asset management in Brazil, which can be used as a source for future research and by professionals to prioritize difficulties in future planning and develop action plans to overcome them. The step-by-step methodological approach presented in this study provides professionals and researchers with a replicable method of identifying potential asset management difficulties in a given specific reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Bancada Feminina e o Aborto: Os Pronunciamentos das Mulheres na Câmara dos Deputados do Brasil e do Uruguai.
- Author
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Schulz, Rosangela and Teixeira da Silva, Luis Gustavo
- Subjects
WOMEN legislators ,TIME series analysis ,REPRODUCTIVE rights ,EVANGELICAL churches ,ABORTION laws - Abstract
Copyright of Dados - Revista de Ciências Sociais is the property of DADOS and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Integrating water charges policies and watershed plans for improved investment and financial sustainability in water resources management.
- Author
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Marques, Guilherme Fernandes, Formiga-Johnsson, Rosa Maria, Laigneau, Patrick, Dalcin, Ana Paula, Goldenstein, Stela, Bonilha, Iraúna, and Possantti, Iporã
- Subjects
WATER management ,WATER quality management ,WATERSHEDS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,CORPORATE finance ,WATERSHED management - Abstract
This paper proposes a dual-feedback process that links watershed plan actions with raw water charges. A dedicated decision support model is created to implement this process and allow long-term financial sustainability analysis. The model offers real-time analysis of various watershed actions using customizable prioritization criteria integrated with different water pricing configurations, including user-polluter pays and beneficiary-pays principles, as well as other funding sources. Application to the Piracicaba–Capiravi–Jundiaí Basins in Brazil shows how important water management and water quality improving actions can be funded through water charges and how finance gaps can be resolved through a shared Vision Modelling approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The case for a climate bonus: waste pickers' perceptions of climate change in Minas Gerais.
- Author
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Dias, Sonia Maria, Castán Broto, Vanesa, Cypriano, Breno, Ogando, Ana Carolina, and Gonçalves, Juliana
- Subjects
RAGPICKERS ,PRECARIOUS employment ,SOCIAL support ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,CLIMATE change ,SUSTAINABLE urban development - Abstract
While the work of waste pickers advances urban sustainability, there has been little focus on how climate change impacts affect them. This paper reports on a pilot study with 61 waste pickers in Minas Gerais, Brazil to understand their perspectives on climate change impacts and actions. It explores how waste pickers experience climate change impacts at home and at work, their adaptive strategies and the specific actions and actors needed to address these impacts. Waste pickers have practical knowledge and experience of climate events. But due to precarious employment and lack of access to services, infrastructure and social support, their responses are improvised and inefficient. They require better institutional support and their proposals must be incorporated into a negotiated approach to urban resilience. Proposals such as the climate bonus – similar to the existing recycling bonus – may help address the structural drivers of vulnerability for waste pickers in Minas Gerais. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Forging alliances: political competition and industrial policy in democratic Brazil.
- Author
-
de Gaspi, Renato H.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL policy ,POLITICAL competition ,PRESSURE groups ,POLICY sciences ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Most of the literature on the politics of industrial policy describes a policy realm that is dominated by business–state relations. This paper goes beyond this and proposes that, in democratic settings, political competition and civil society actors also play a vital role in industrial policy. Through a lens focused on Brazil during the 2000s, the study delves into the dynamics between the election of a centre-left party and the subsequent industrial policy, highlighting the interplay of democratic mandates, entrenched economic interests, and supportive developmental alliances. Notably, the continuation of a centre-left coalition and consistent institutional frameworks witnessed considerable shifts in industrial policy outcomes, which allows for an in-depth evaluation of interest group influence on policy formation and implementation. By triangulating data from 23 interviews with actors in the industrial policy process, data from the Brazilian National Development Bank (BNDES), and an analysis of industrial policy plans, this paper posits that the prevalence of economic issues in the electoral debate and the participation of societal actors in the policymaking process are enablers of innovation-focused industrial policies; this allows governments to countervail the power of incumbent sectors and undertake policies that are not favoured by the prevailing business interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Why the Brazilian Jewish Left Is Not Anti-Zionist: The Politics of the Zionist Left as Counterrevolutionary Gatekeepers in Brazil.
- Author
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Huberman, Bruno
- Subjects
PRAXIS (Process) ,ANTI-Zionism ,JEWISH communists ,POLITICAL elites ,JEWISH communities - Abstract
This paper explores the praxis of the Zionist Left in Brazil, particularly during the 2010s. It argues that the Zionist Left, which claims to be a progressive grouping that stands in solidarity with the oppressed people in Palestine and in Brazil, functions in fact as a colonial counterrevolutionary actor against radical-left emancipatory politics. Indeed, the Zionist Left functions as a gatekeeper, blocking sectors of the Jewish community and the Brazilian Left from joining the growing anti-Zionist decolonial movement in Brazil. This paper aims to show how various Zionist Left groups have historically worked with the Zionist elite and the Brazilian state to undermine anti-Zionist communist Jewish alternatives by resorting to fraudulent discourse and even force in order to build support for the Zionist settler-colonial project in Palestine. This paper utilises a Marxist, anti-Zionist and anti-colonial framework in order to provide a counter-hegemonic critique for an emancipatory praxis that rejects colonialism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. ENSINO DE GEOGRAFIA E FORMAÇÃO DE PROFESSORES: UMA HISTÓRIA EM CONSTRUÇÃO.
- Author
-
Mendes Machado, Allef Dianini and da Rocha Reis, Keroleinny Kariny
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY teachers ,TEACHER training ,GEOGRAPHY education ,TEACHER education ,TEACHER educators - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Foco (Interdisciplinary Studies Journal) is the property of Revista Foco and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. On-board ATC System Design of Sao Paulo Line 13, Brazil.
- Author
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Wang Cheng, Liu Junfeng, and Liu Jia
- Subjects
SYSTEMS design - Abstract
This paper introduces the general situation of urban rail transit in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and describes the signal system and system composition of Sao Paulo Metro Line 13. The on-board signal system of this line is analyzed in detail, and the system composition, driving modes and main system functions of on-board ATC are analyzed and discussed. The receiving and processing function of track circuits, the speed monitoring function of release speed and the monitoring function of train braking force are analyzed in detail, and a design scheme is proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Domestication of Machismo in Brazil: Motivations, Reflexivity, and Consonance of Religious Male Gender Roles.
- Author
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Dengah II, H. J. François, Dressler, William W., and Falcão, Ana
- Subjects
GENDER role ,SOCIAL norms ,REFLEXIVITY ,RELIGIOUS identity ,BRAZILIANS - Abstract
The relationship between culture and the individual is a central focus of social scientific research. This paper examines motivations that mediate between shared culture norms and individual actions. Inspired by the works of Leon Festinger and Melford Spiro, we posit that social network conformation (the perceived adherence of one's social network with norms) and internalization of cultural norms (incorporation of cultural models with the self-schema) will differentially shape behavior (cultural consonance) depending on the domain and individual characteristics. For the domain of gender roles among Brazilian men, religious affiliation results in different configurations of the individual and culture. Our findings suggest that, due to changing and competing cultural models, religious men are compelled to reflexively "think" about what masculinity means to them, rather than subconsciously conform to social (hegemonic) expectations. This study demonstrates the importance of considering the impetus of culturally informed behaviors and, in doing so, provides a methodological means for measuring and interpreting such motivations, an important factor in the relationship between culture and the individual. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. PHOTOGRAPHY, MONTAGE AND ARCHIVE: AN ATLAS OF A DICTATORSHIP AND ITS LANDSCAPES.
- Author
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BALBELA, GUSTAVO
- Subjects
HISTORY of dictatorships ,MILITARY government ,DICTATORSHIP ,BRAZILIAN history ,LANDSCAPES - Abstract
The far-right turn in Brazilian politics led to the re-emergence of a ghost that has been hindering our political agency since the dawn of the republic but that had been hidden for a few decades: the Army and its violent political agency. This essay will frame the archive as an important instance within the artistic practice I have developed as a response to the apparition of this military monster during the Bolsonaro years. In a body of work called "Concrete Witnesses Inquiry," I have combined images and texts (collected mainly from the press) with an urban landscape photographic work that presents overpasses built in my hometown, Porto Alegre, during the 1964 military dictatorship. Following authors such as Georges Didi-Huberman and Allan Sekula, I suggest that the archive can be seen as a central axis in this process, allowing me to connect otherwise unimportant elements from the urban landscape with violent historical processes, often considered distant and abstract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
38. Innovation policy dismantling: strategies and causes in contemporary Brazil.
- Author
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Costa Cavalcante, Pedro Luiz
- Subjects
GROUNDED theory ,POLITICAL economic analysis ,MIXED methods research ,STAKEHOLDERS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,BUREAUCRACY - Abstract
Copyright of RAP: Revista Brasileira de Administração Pública is the property of RAP: Revista Brasileira de Administracao Publica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. How is Integration Defined and Measured, and what Factors Drive Success in Brazil? An Integrative Review.
- Author
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NEIVA, ELAINE R., ABBAD, GARDENIA, GANDOLFO CONCEIÇÃO, MARIA INÊS, MOURA PINHO, DIANA LÚCIA, and XYRICHIS, ANDREAS
- Subjects
ONLINE information services ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RESEARCH funding ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,MEDLINE ,SUCCESS - Abstract
Introduction: Integration in health and care can improve quality and outcomes, but it is challenged by expansion of medical knowledge, social pressures on patient needs, and demands to deliver critical information. In Latin American and in other lower and middle-income countries integrated care remains in development. This paper examined the available literature on integrated care to understand how Latin American countries identify and measure integration, and what factors influence success. Methods: This integrative literature review included systematic searches in Global Health, PubMed, SciELO and BVSPsi databases for articles on integrated care in Spanish, Portuguese, and English in the period from January of 1999 to December 2020. The articles were screened for selection and assessed independently by five reviewers that used the inclusion criteria of papers about integration in health care systems. The sample excluded articles that did not deal with the integration of health care, which addressed issues related to public health campaigns, programs to control endemics and epidemics, reports on the experience of implementing health services, health promotion guidelines, food safety, oral health, and books evaluation. Results: 24 articles were included: qualitative (75%), quantitative (12,5%), and mixed-method research (4%) published between 2000 and 2017. All studies were undertaken in Brazil, and two of them were also conducted in Latin American countries. In 15 articles there was an interchangeable use between concepts of integration of services and integrated care, while nine studies did not define integration. Barriers to integration included absence of shared understanding of knowledge among members of interprofessional teams, lack of clarity on professional roles, missing consensus on a definition and measurement of integrated care, power struggles between professionals, poor institutional support, insufficient team preparation and training and unequal valuation of professions by society. Conclusion: Several types of integration and factors contributing to the success of implementation of integrated care in various contexts in Brazil were identified. The concept of integration reflected the varied local and regional realities including different health settings and levels of health and care, suggesting a need for further clarifications on its objective and components especially in LMIC contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. An institutional and transaction cost analysis for the efficiency of water service in Brazilian local government consortia.
- Author
-
Silvestre, Hugo Consciência, Marques, Rui Cunha, Dollery, Brian, and Correia, Aldenisio Moraes
- Subjects
TRANSACTION costs ,WATER supply ,LOCAL government ,CONTRACT management - Abstract
In this paper, we seek to break new ground by empirically investigating the relationship between cooperating entities, local government institutions and transaction costs and its effect on cost efficiency for water services through consortia in Brazilian local government. Drawing on an institutional and transaction cost framework, our results show that the institutional arrangements employed in water service provision have had a significant effect on cost efficiency, measured by total expenditure per user, between 2011 to 2019. Through a Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE), we found that cost efficiency increases slowly for those units performing under bureaucracies and faster under public enterprises. In all instances, dedicated asset specificities and contract management complexity explained differences in water service provision cost efficiency. These findings have theoretical significance as well as significant public policy implications for intermunicipal cooperative agreements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Identifying Brazilian functional regions: a network approach, 1980–2010.
- Author
-
Dalberto, Cassiano Ricardo and Amaral, Pedro
- Subjects
RESOURCE allocation ,MUNICIPAL government ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
This paper seeks to identify functional regions that reflect the contiguous spatial economic reach of major Brazilian urban centres. We use data from commuting to work and study between municipalities and apply network analysis methods for the periods of 1980, 2000 and 2010, aiming to find regions with the maximal internal consistency of their commuting flows in each period. Our results provide functional regions that serve as an alternative geographical division for Brazil, with the advantage of broadening the scope for regional analysis, policies and planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Goodbye, Mr. Portugal: Fiscal crisis, constitutional revolution, and the independence of Brazil (1808–22).
- Author
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Cariello, Rafael and Pereira, Thales Zamberlan
- Subjects
FINANCIAL crises ,DECLARATION of Independence, Brazil, 1822 ,REAL wages - Abstract
This article provides a new interpretation of Brazil's independence that relates the process of political emancipation to the Portuguese empire's fiscal crisis at the beginning of the nineteenth century. We discuss the origins and impact of the fiscal crisis that followed the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal in 1807 and the transfer of the government to Rio de Janeiro. Quantitative evidence shows that expenditures with the palace and the army in Brazil were higher than those discussed in the previous literature. Moreover, the government was only able to finance itself by increasing loans via paper money issuances from the Bank of Brazil. Real wages show that the inflationary policy in the 1810s led to a rapid decline in living standards, fuelling dissatisfaction with the government. Our findings are consistent with views expressed in contemporary official correspondence and parliamentary debates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Precarity Trap: Modelling Non-Democratic Journalistic Practices Beyond Media Capture.
- Author
-
Ferreira, Ricardo Ribeiro
- Subjects
PRECARITY ,PRESS ,SEMI-structured interviews ,CONTENT analysis ,MANUFACTURING processes - Abstract
How and why does legacy news media move from protecting to undermining democracy? Several studies argue that journalism can facilitate and shape democratic backsliding. However, evidence is scarce and, to some extent, limited to the content analysis of news outputs and editorials. The causal mechanisms of an anti-democratic role for the press and how it is operationalised into specific processes of news production remain largely misunderstood. Using 36 semi-structured qualitative interviews and three case studies, this paper analyses journalistic practices and role perceptions in Brazil within a period of constant decline in the quality of democracy (2016-2021). The results show that labour precarity is a crucial driver in journalistic practices capable of damaging democracy, which challenges previous assumptions that media capture is mostly influenced by the political economy of news organisations. This research also indicates that journalists are not homogeneously dominated by the interests of elites and can engage with them on their own terms to advance personal agendas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Transpiration from crystalline unconfined aquifers as the cause of groundwater salinization in a semiarid area of Brazil.
- Author
-
Kreis, Marjorie Beate, Taupin, Jean-Denis, Lachassagne, Patrick, Patris, Nicolas, and Martins, Eduardo Sávio Passos Rodrigues
- Subjects
SALINIZATION ,GROUNDWATER ,SALTWATER encroachment ,AQUIFERS ,AGRICULTURAL development ,GROUNDWATER recharge ,HYDROLOGIC cycle - Abstract
Copyright of Hydrogeology Journal is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Lula's Prison Letters and the Brazilian Presidential Papers: Archives, Readings, and Uses.
- Author
-
Heymann, Luciana and Moreli, Alexandre
- Subjects
PRISONERS' writings ,PRESIDENTS - Abstract
For five hundred eighty days, between 2018 and 2019, former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva remained imprisoned in the city of Curitiba, about two hundred miles South of São Paulo. During that period, more than twenty thousand letters were sent to him from all regions of the country—the result of a campaign initiated by the Workers' Party and rapidly disseminated through social media—correspondence now archived at the Lula Institute, in the city of São Paulo, as part of the Lula Presidential Archives. This article surveys the status of private presidential archives in Brazil, probing the nature of "prison letters" and their uses in campaign actions for Lula's release, with special attention to the circulation of documents in digital format on websites and social media. The authors had access to the documentation cited in this piece during the mobilization for the Lula Livre movements. Finally, the article contributes to the study of political correspondence and analyzes the challenges posed to historical research by the digital circulation of documents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Schools of struggle: social movement learning in the Brazilian high school student occupations (Primavera secundarista, 2015–2016).
- Author
-
Platzky Miller, Josh
- Subjects
SOCIAL movements ,STRIKES & lockouts ,SOCIAL advocacy ,STUDENT activism ,HIGH school students - Abstract
Over 2015–2016, high school students in Brazil occupied hundreds of schools across the country. Students fought to keep public schools open, funded, and functional, against outsourcing and privatisation, and in solidarity with teachers' trade unions and strikes. The 'primavera secundarista' ('student spring') was the most significant school student movement since the struggles against the military dictatorship (1964–1988). This paper firstly addresses the political dynamics of the primavera secundarista. Secondly, it discusses the movement's educational practices, which flourished in the months that students occupied their schools. Thirdly, it discusses the forms of community and solidarity that students built with other social actors and how they each learnt from this. In doing so, the paper builds on the work of Aziz Choudry and other scholars of social movement learning to argue that such student movements are prime sites of counter-hegemonic knowledge production and dissemination. Shown through the Brazilian high school occupations, the paper highlights how student movements are unusual in being situated in formal epistemic institutions, and yet are not widely recognised, especially in high schools, as blending formal and informal learning to produce and share knowledge-from-below. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Extending the conceptualisation of class across field and city: Transgressing servitude towards an emancipatory praxis.
- Author
-
Thomaz Junior, Antonio and Garvey, Brian
- Subjects
PRAXIS (Process) ,SOCIAL conflict ,PUBLIC spaces ,SLAVERY ,SERVITUDES ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This article advocates the transgression of incumbent theoretical divisions between rural and urban abodes of production and draws on new analyses of contemporary spaces of capital and labour antagonisms in Brazil. It does so to articulate a broadening of the definition of class and class struggle towards an emancipatory praxis that does not necessarily prioritise industrialised workers. The study has a particular focus on the reconfiguration of socio-spatial arrangements linked to 21st century commodity cultivation, extraction and trade and subsequent class tensions on the material and epistemological frontier between (hydro, agro and mineral) mega projects and the autonomous territories of rural subjects. The renewed degradation of conditions for a labour force that has always been precarious, the dissolving dichotomy between proletarianised and peasant labour, and the ongoing resistance to corporate capture by communities is evoked to contrast distinct metabolic relations within rural territories with the objectification of labour and nature under capitalism. The analysis reveals new configurations of class domination, tension and counter movements. Many critical scholars, particularly those in the Global South, have been attentive to alternate readings of the world by indigenous, African descendent, peasant and agro-extractivist communities that may be unfamiliar yet underpin vociferous, and often fatal, resistance to capital accumulation. The task to effectively situate these struggles within a theory of broader, heterogeneous class struggle and integrate this 'wealth' of collective struggle and knowledge towards societal transformation remains important work in progress. In this spirit, the paper offers some possibilities for making new conceptual and material connections between rural and urban productive spaces and across currently fragmented class formations and identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Isabella's lion: circular care, kinship, and healing in Brazilian Candomblé.
- Author
-
McNeilly, Hannah
- Subjects
CULTURE ,CAREGIVERS ,CHRONIC diseases ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,FAMILY-centered care ,SPIRITUAL healing ,SEVERITY of illness index ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,HUMANITY ,SELF-neglect ,EXPERIENCE ,RHEUMATOID arthritis ,FAMILY relations ,PATIENT-professional relations ,RELIGION ,HEALTH self-care - Abstract
This paper centers on Isabella, a Candomblé follower who struggled with severe rheumatoid arthritis from an early age, arguing that care and self-care practices in Candomblé are intertwined to such extent that they challenge the dichotomy of caring and being cared for. In contrast to a linear model of care that positions care-giver and care-receiver at opposite ends of care relationships, the concept of 'circular care' describes forms of care that are directed at others and simultaneously at oneself. Exploring the religious kinship in a Candomblé house - with Candomblé deities (orixás) and between humans - this paper shows how circular care blurs the distinction between self and other. The emic concept of 'the double mirror' illustrates the 'constitutive alterity' of humans and orixás who relate to each other through kinship building and collective care practices. Since circular care frames one's care for the orixás and the religious family as healing self-care, failing to provide the correct care may in turn be experienced as detrimental self-neglect. The concept of circular care thus enables a deeper understanding of complex dynamics of care and self-care in the contexts of chronic illness, religion, kinship, and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Blockchain and smart contract architecture for notaries services under civil law: a Brazilian experience.
- Author
-
Dias Menezes, Leonardo, de Araújo, Luciano Vieira, and Nishijima, Marislei
- Subjects
CIVIL law ,BLOCKCHAINS ,NOTARIES ,CIVIL service ,OFFICES ,TRUST - Abstract
This paper proposes a blockchain solution for some activities currently performed by notary offices under the Civil Law judiciary that is technically viable. The architecture is also planned to accommodate Brazil's legal, political, and economic requirements. Notaries are responsible for providing various intermediation services for civil transactions, where their primary role is to be the trusted party capable of guaranteeing the authenticity of these transactions. This type of intermediation is common and demanded in Latin American countries, such as Brazil, which is regulated by a Civil Law judiciary. The lack of adequate technology to meet such legal demands leads to an excess of bureaucracy, dependence on manual document and signature checks, and centralized and face-to-face actions in the physical dependence of the notary. To deal with this scenario, this work presents a blockchain-based solution to make some of the activities performed by notaries automatic, guaranteeing non-modification and adherence to civil laws. Thus, the suggested framework was evaluated in accordance with Brazilian legislation and provides an economic evaluation of the proposed solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Politics and Economics of Brazilian Competition Law.
- Author
-
Kira, Beatriz
- Subjects
SOCIAL goals ,JUSTICE ,SOCIOMATERIALITY ,PRACTICAL politics ,ECONOMIC competition ,CAPITALISM ,ANTITRUST law ,SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
Copyright of Latin American Law Review is the property of Universidad de los Andes and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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