360 results
Search Results
2. Connecting financialisation and structural change: a critical appraisal regarding Brazil.
- Author
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Corrêa, Mariana Finello and Feijo, Carmem
- Subjects
FINANCIALIZATION ,PRICES ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,TRADEMARKS - Abstract
The contribution of this paper is to discuss the particularities of financialisation in peripheral economies, emphasising the channels through which financialisation contributes to redefining their trajectory of structural change. This paper has, as a reference, the structural regression of the Brazilian case, which is characterised by the deindustrialisation and trade specialisation marked by export reprimarisation. The aspects covered are the financialisation of non-financial corporations, of the exchange rate and of the determination of the commodity prices, which are associated with the Dutch disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Rentiers and distributive conflict in Brazil (2000–2019).
- Author
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Marques, Pedro Romero and Rugitsky, Fernando
- Subjects
INCOME distribution ,DISTRIBUTIVE justice ,GOVERNMENT business enterprises ,EMINENT domain - Abstract
The paper examines the determinants of rentier income in contemporary financialised capitalist economies by analysing the case of Brazil. It argues that different drivers of rentier income may have comparable potential to channel a substantial share of aggregate income to asset owners. The paper estimates an expanded functional income distribution for Brazil for the period between 2000 and 2019, which distinguishes between rentier income, wages, profits of enterprise and government income. In the last two decades, the share of rentier income in Brazilian GDP has fluctuated around an approximately stable trend even though its composition has changed profoundly. The estimation presented allows for an analysis of the role played by financial expropriation (i.e. interest payments out of wage income) in this expanded functional income distribution, which points to alternative results concerning the recent trajectory of the wage share of income and of the distributive conflict. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Adapting Codesign Techniques for the Construction of a Learning Environment of a Written Second Language for the D/deaf.
- Author
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Paim, Polianna, Prietch, Soraia Silva, and Sánchez, J Alfredo
- Subjects
WRITTEN communication ,CLASSROOM environment ,DEAF children ,DEAF people ,PORTUGUESE language ,LANGUAGE policy - Abstract
In Brazil, many D/deaf persons use the country's official sign language, Libras, to communicate and develop a sociocultural identity. For most Libras users, learning how to read and write in Portuguese, the country's official written language, is a challenge. To address the problem, we present a framework for codesigning accessible technologies for and with D/deaf persons. In this paper, we describe and analyze the case study of an environment to support the teaching–learning process of written Portuguese as a second language. Our main contribution is the documented experiences of codesigning with D/deaf and hearing participants, through individual and collaborative work, which increased confidence and creativity and enhanced empathy through sharing own experiences. Various types of participants were included through the entire framework process, and important values were reinforced, such as ownership and self-determination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Personal identification and missing persons initiatives in Santa Catarina state, Brazil: forensic perspectives from 2019 to 2021.
- Author
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Miamoto, Paulo and Uehara, Clineu Julien Seki
- Subjects
MISSING persons ,DNA fingerprinting ,FORENSIC anthropology ,FORENSIC genetics ,IDENTIFICATION of the dead ,AUTOPSY ,DNA analysis - Abstract
Santa Catarina is a small, developed, and relatively safe state in South Brazil. Despite having positive social economic indicators, it still faces multiple challenges regarding forensic practices for personal identification. The objective of this paper is to discuss the recent advances and current challenges in the region, from the perspectives of anthropological and dental postmortem human identification, missing persons, and disaster victim identification (DVI) from 2019 to 2021. The recent creation of a Forensic Anthropology Sector (SAF) in the state's official forensic institution (Polícia Científica—PCI) has significantly improved identification of unidentified remains and optimised resources available for DNA analysis. However, SAF is still quite understaffed, which negatively affects the recovery of skeletal material, its preparation, and the time needed for filing reports. Santa Catarina has passed legislation for missing persons in 2015, 4 years prior to the sanction of federal laws implementing the national policy for the disappeared. Nonetheless, a lack of integration between stakeholders remains a problem that PCI has tried to circumvent with the Conecta Programme, a multidisciplinary and integrated initiative between families of the missing persons, police agencies, and the Public Ministry. The programme aims to collect not only reference DNA samples, but also relevant anthropological and dental data. It also offers facial progression services in cases of disappearances that occurred many years ago. Despite a history of disasters in the state, PCI still needs to implement international DVI standards at an institutional level. Recent training on Phase 1 DVI procedures, integrated with other responding institutions, indicates better preparation for future disasters. There are many challenges ahead for Santa Catarina's forensic institution and professionals that have yet to be addressed, but the overall situation on routine personal identification, missing persons initiatives, and DVI has improved over the last 2 years. Over the last 2 years, the Santa Catarina state in South Brazil has experienced significant improvements in personal identification procedures, missing persons policies, and DVI capacitation. The creation of the Forensic Anthropology Sector (SAF) in October 2020 (which also houses dental postmortem examinations) in the state's official forensic institution (PCI) has established an alternative for quick, low-cost personal identification in cases of unidentified remains, in addition to optimising resources available to DNA analysis. PCI's Programme Conecta has been locally promoting improved integration of missing persons' stakeholders with the newly instituted national policy for the disappeared in Brazil. Despite having a history of disasters and a recent first integrated training on Phase 1 DVI procedures, Santa Catarina state still needs to implement DVI procedures at an institutional level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Health reform and Indigenous health policy in Brazil: contexts, actors and discourses.
- Author
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Pontes, Ana Lucia de M, Santos, Ricardo Ventura, and de M Pontes, Ana Lucia
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HEALTH care reform ,SOCIAL participation ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,CONSTITUTIONAL reform ,HOLISTIC medicine - Abstract
Given the challenges related to reducing socio-economic and health inequalities, building specific health system approaches for Indigenous peoples is critical. In Brazil, following constitutional reforms that led to the universalization of health care in the late 1980s, a specific health subsystem was created for Indigenous peoples in 1999. In this paper, we use a historical perspective to contextualize the creation of the Indigenous Health Subsystem in Brazil. This study is based on data from interviews with Indigenous and non-Indigenous subjects and document-based analysis. In the 1980s, during the post-dictatorship period in Brazil, the emergence of Indigenous movements in the country and the support for pro-Indigenous organizations helped establish a political agenda that emphasized a broad range of issues, including the right to a specific health policy. Indigenous leaders established alliances with participants of the Brazilian health reform movement, which resulted in broad debates about the specificities of Indigenous peoples, and the need for a specific health subsystem. We highlight three main points in our analysis: (1) the centrality of a holistic health perspective; (2) the emphasis on social participation; (3) the need for the reorganization of health care. These points proved to be convergent with the development of the Brazilian health reform and were expressed in documents of the Indigenist Missionary Council (CIMI) and the Union of Indigenous Nations (UNI). They were also consolidated in the final report of the First National Conference on the Protection of Indigenous Health in 1986, becoming the cornerstone of the national Indigenous health policy declared in 1999. Our analysis reveals that Indigenous people and pro-Indigenous groups were key players in the development of the Indigenous Health Subsystem in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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7. Demand-led growth decomposition: an empirical investigation of the Brazilian slowdown in the 2010s.
- Author
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Magacho, Guilherme R and Rocha, Igor L
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PUBLIC investments ,ACCOUNTING methods ,NATURAL resources ,INCOME inequality ,INFRASTRUCTURE funds ,GROWTH rate - Abstract
The empirical investigation on countries' long-term growth usually relies on growth accounting methods, which are based on a supply-led approach, where factors accumulation are the main countries' growth constraints. This approach, however, ignores the importance of effective demand in explaining the long-term dynamics. Conversely, Keynesians stress the centrality of effective demand to explain why some countries present high growth rates for prolonged periods and others do not. They account for different views on the determinants of demand growth, such as exports dynamics, income distribution and public investment. The aim of the paper is twofold. Firstly, it extends the SDA method – a method that allows us to identify sources of changes in input–output matrices – to account for endogenous consumption and import-substitution impacts, and, secondly, it applies this method to understand the Brazilian slowdown in the 2010s. Based on a Miyazawa–Leontief framework, it is possible to identify the importance of each of the demand factors in explaining countries' growth, considering both the autonomous sources of demand and their potential to spread through the economy via their multiplier effects. The application of this extension to investigate the Brazilian slowdown in the 2010s shows the importance of natural resource exports, public investment and absorption of domestic demand in different sub-periods. Based on these findings, we discuss the possibility of Brazil to restore its growth potential through specific demand stimulus, such as infrastructure investments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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8. Marine spatial planning and the risk of ocean grabbing in the tropical Atlantic.
- Author
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Queffelec, Betty, Bonnin, Marie, Ferreira, Beatrice, Bertrand, Sophie, Silva, Solange Teles Da, Diouf, Fatou, Trouillet, Brice, Cudennec, Annie, Brunel, Adrien, Billant, Odeline, and Toonen, Hilde
- Subjects
OCEAN zoning ,INTEGRATED coastal zone management ,OCEAN - Abstract
Ocean grabbing occurs when traditional users, such as small-scale fishers, are pushed aside by new development activities. This grabbing must be prevented to avoid sea uses that maintain or increase social inequity. In this paper, we show that in tropical Atlantic countries, such as Brazil and Senegal, examples of ocean grabbing already occur. In this context, we analyse if Maritime Spatial Planning (MSP) may be an opportunity to limit ocean grabbing or, to the contrary, poses a risk to increase it. MSP calls for an ecosystem approach that requires integrated coastal and marine management and involves stakeholders in developing a shared vision of the future, where society and environment are preserved. However, recent studies have shown that MSP is a process to be used cautiously to ensure equitable decisions. Meanwhile, the concept is spreading worldwide including in tropical Atlantic countries. We highlight that context matters and the specificities of the tropical Atlantic must be taken into account when deploying MSP processes. In the tropical Atlantic context, there is increased imbalances of stakeholder power, traps from decision support tools, and a need for adaptive management. These specific features must be addressed when deploying MSP in a way to avoid ocean grabbing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Financial hierarchy and banking strategies: a regional analysis for the Brazilian case.
- Author
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Nogueira, Mara, Crocco, Marco, Figueiredo, Ana Teresa, and Diniz, Gustavo
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,PANEL analysis ,ECONOMETRIC models ,STRATEGIC planning - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to investigate whether Brazil’s financial system has a differentiated strategy in space. The analysis is based on the theory of liquidity preference, regionally differentiated. In addition, it assumes that the banking strategies are associated with centrality, as defined in Christäller’s central place theory. The analysis used indicators of 2,924 cities grouped according to the type of financial services they provide. In addition, the paper presents an estimation using a dynamic panel data econometric model for the period 2000–08, in order to test if the banking strategies are related to the centrality of the cities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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10. Reforming pharmaceutical regulation: A case study of generic drugs in Brazil.
- Author
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da Fonseca, Elize Massard
- Subjects
GENERIC drug laws ,PRESSURE groups ,PHARMACEUTICAL industry ,PATENTS ,DECISION making - Abstract
Brazil is renowned worldwide for its remarkable reforms in pharmaceutical regulation, as the Generic Drug Act that have enhanced access to essential medicines while lowering drug costs. In contrast with analysis of pharmaceutical regulation that invokes international guidelines as inspiration for countries to reformulate their norms or argues that regulations emerge in order to serve the interests of powerful interest groups; this paper focuses on actors' preferences and demands to explain how Brazil promoted this large-scale regulatory policy. Paradoxically, the generic drug regulation introduced in the name of patients and opposed by local firms given the high cost to adapt its plants and processes, is today opposed by important patient advocacy groups but solidified by the strong support of local and multinational pharmaceutical firms. The paper concludes that the state still matters for pharmaceutical regulation and that pharmaceutical regulation is only partially influenced by non-state actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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11. Analytical capacity as a critical condition for responding to COVID-19 in Brazil.
- Author
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Massaco Koga, Natália, de Moura Palotti, Pedro Lucas, de Miranda Marques Pontes, Pedro Arthur, Gontyjo do Couto, Bruno, and Vieira Soares, Marcos Luiz
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,CIVIL service positions ,POLITICIANS ,FEDERAL government ,BUREAUCRACY - Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic posed several challenges to the Brazilian health system, among them the general context of ambiguity and uncertainty and the conflicting positioning of the government in power concerning scientific advice resources. Different aspects can be analyzed to explore the dynamics of strengthening and resilience of the system. This paper focuses on its analytical capacity, examining how it was developed and recently challenged. The investigation employed survey data, analysis of official documents and newspaper articles, and in-depth interviews with specialists and federal bureaucrats. The research shows the magnitude and relevance of that dimension of policy capacity in the federal health system and how it was crucial to the resilience of the system in defining the directions of the fight against COVID-19 in Brazil, although scientific-based recommendations were rejected by political leaders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. TELEVISION AND DIVORCE: EVIDENCE FROM BRAZILIAN NOVELAS.
- Author
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Chong, Alberto and La Ferrara, Eliana
- Subjects
DIVORCE ,TELEVISION research - Abstract
In this paper we study the link between television and divorce in Brazil. We exploit variation in the timing of availability of the signal of Rede Globo--the network that had a virtual monopoly on telenovelas in the country--across municipal areas. Using three rounds of census data (1970, 1980, and 1991) and controlling for area fixed effects and for time-varying characteristics, we find that the share of women who are separated or divorced increases significantly after the Globo signal becomes available. The effect is robust to controlling for potential determinants of Globo's entry strategy and is stronger for relatively smaller areas, where the signal reaches a higher fraction of the population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Global mobility of microfinance policies.
- Author
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Oikawa Cordeiro, Beatriz
- Subjects
MICROFINANCE ,POLICY diffusion ,PERSONAL loans ,DEVELOPING countries ,EDUCATIONAL mobility ,SPACETIME - Abstract
Throughout the 1970s in South Asia and Latin America, there was a surge of experiences of offering small loans through innovative practices. Following these successes, the dissemination of microfinance institutions is seen all over the globe. Brazil stands out for being a pioneer in this field, having developed a microcredit program even before Grameen Bank, from Bangladesh, the main institution responsible for the spread of microfinance worldwide. This paper aims to understand the social practices, power relations and institutional infrastructure surrounding microfinance, taking the Global South as a starting point and focusing on Brazil. In so doing, it looks at the policy mobility of microfinance, shining light on how policy diffusion and transfer are entangled in the practices and processes of different institutions, actors and networks. It identifies two approaches within the formulation and practice of microfinance historically. Four illustrative cases are discussed in order to present the mobility of microfinance policies in Brazil drawing from the international scenario. The paper's point of departure for the analysis of the mobility of microfinance is that policy trajectories are fraught with ambivalence and contradiction. They are part of a complex universe permeated by hybridism over time and space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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14. Ambient seismic noise tomography in west-central and Southern Brazil, characterizing the crustal structure of the Chaco-Paraná, Pantanal and Paraná basins.
- Author
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Shirzad, Taghi, Assumpcao, Marcelo, and Bianchi, Marcelo
- Subjects
MICROSEISMS ,SEISMIC tomography ,GREEN'S functions ,SUTURE zones (Structural geology) ,SEISMOGRAMS ,FRICTION velocity - Abstract
Surface wave analysis provides important information on crustal structure, but it is challenging to obtain accurate/robust models in aseismic regions because of the lack of local earthquake records. In this paper, interstation empirical Green's functions retrieved by ambient seismic noise in 75 broad-band stations from 2016 January to 2018 September were used to study crustal structure in west-central Brazil. Fast marching method was applied to calculate the 2-D surface wave tomographic maps, and local dispersion curves were estimated in the period range of 4–80 s for each geographic cell. 1-D damped least squares inversion method was then conducted to obtained shear wave velocity model. Finally, the average (|$\tilde{\rm V}$|
S ) of the calculated VSV and VSH quasi 3-D models were used to characterize the crustal structure. Besides the checkerboard test resolution, a stochastic test with the effect of errors in the dispersion curves and choice of inversion parameters were carried out to better evaluate model uncertainties. Our results show a clear relation between the sedimentary thickness and geological units with the shorter period tomographic maps. Agreement has also been observed in longer periods such as the clear N–S anomaly along the Asuncion and Rio Grande Arches representing the boundary between the Chaco-Paraná and the Paraná basins. A 3-D composite velocity model shows a crustal structure consisting of three main layers. Some differences in lower crustal properties were found between the Paraná and Chaco-Paraná basins, consistent with a recently postulated, gravity-derived Western Paraná suture zone. However, no high velocities along the SW–NE axis of the Paraná basin were found to confirm proposed underplating. At the eastern edge of the Pantanal basin, the thin crust seems to be associated with a very thin (or lack of) lower crustal layer, consistent with a recently proposed crustal delamination hypothesis for the formation of the Pantanal basin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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15. Making Space for Civil Society: Institutional Reforms and Local Democracy in Brazil.
- Author
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Baiocchi, Gianpaolo, Heller, Patrick, and Silva, Marcelo Kunrath
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,CIVIL society ,DECISION making ,MUNICIPAL government ,DEMOCRATIZATION - Abstract
This paper contributes to the growing body of research on participatory democracy and the literature on associational democracy by exploring the impact that institutional reforms have on local-level configurations of civil society. In the 1980s a wide range of participatory experiments were initiated in Brazil, most notably Participatory Budgeting in municipal governance. Municipios that adopted PB in principle devolve much or all of the decision making on new investments to decentralized participatory forums. In this paper we consider the results of an eight-city matched-pair analysis conducted in 2004. in which we selected municipios that adopted PB in 1997-2000, and matched them with a similar municipio that did not in the same period, drawing from the full sample of municipios over 20,000 inhabitants. Building on relational theories of civil society, we show that PB has clear but limited effects on civil society. It moves civil society practices from clientelism to associationalism, but does not contribute to the capacity of civil society to self-organize, at least in the time-frame considered. We also show that this democratizing effect on civil society practices and networks is conditioned by pre-existing state-civil society relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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16. Financial cycles and fiscal policy in developing and emerging economies: an evaluation of the Brazilian case (1997–2018).
- Author
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Guedes, Dyeggo Rocha, Cunha, André Moreira, and Peruffo, Luiza
- Subjects
FISCAL policy ,EMERGING markets ,FINANCIALIZATION - Abstract
This article investigates the existence of a link between financial cycles and fiscal cycles, and discusses possible policy implications for developing and emerging economies (DEEs). It empirically analyses the impact of financial cycle shocks on the short-term dynamics of Brazil's fiscal policy by estimating a vector autoregressive (VAR) model for the period 1997–2018. The results indicate that financial cycles have pro-cyclical effects on the fiscal policy. This suggests that a fiscal policy should consider not only the cyclical behaviour of the output, but also its role in minimising financial factors. By explicitly linking Brazil's fiscal performance with Brazil's higher vulnerability to the financial cycle, this article adds to the literature that strives to understand the policy implications of the financialisation process in DEEs. It also contributes to the more general empirical literature on DEEs' fiscal dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A principal component approach for predicting the stem volume in Eucalyptus plantations in Brazil using airborne LiDAR data.
- Author
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Silva, Carlos Alberto, Klauberg, Carine, Hudak, Andrew T., Vierling, Lee A., Liesenberg, Veraldo, e Carvalho, Samuel P. C., and Rodriguez, Luiz C. E.
- Subjects
EUCALYPTUS ,PLANT stems ,PLANTATIONS ,FOREST management ,TROPICAL forests - Abstract
Improving management practices in industrial forest plantations may increase production efficiencies, thereby reducing pressures on native tropical forests for meeting global pulp needs. This study aims to predict stem volume (V) in plantations of fast-growing Eucalyptus hybrid clones located in southeast Brazil using field plot and airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data. Forest inventory attributes and LiDAR-derived metrics were calculated at 108 sample plots. The best LiDAR-based predictors of V were identified based on loadings calculated from a principal component analysis (PCA). After selecting these best predictors using PCA, we developed multiple regression models predicting V from selected LiDAR metrics. Metrics related to tree height and canopy depth were most effective for V prediction, with an overall model coefficient of determination (adj. R²) of 0.87, and a root mean squared error (RMSE) of 27.60 m³ ha
-1 (i.e. relative RMSE = 9.99 per cent). We used this model to map stem V of Eucalyptus hybrid clones across the full LiDAR data extent. The accuracy and precision of our results show that LiDAR-derived V is appropriate for updating Eucalyptus forest base maps and registries in the paper and pulp supply chain. However, further studies are necessary to evaluate and compare the cost of acquisition and processing of LiDAR data against conventional V inventory in this system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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18. TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY IN PRODUCTION IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY: AN EMPIRICAL EXAMINATION OF THE BRAZILIAN PLASTICS AND STEEL INDUSTRIES.
- Author
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TYLER, WILLIAM G.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC efficiency ,PRODUCTION functions (Economic theory) ,STEEL industry ,EMPIRICAL research ,ESTIMATION theory ,MATHEMATICAL programming ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper estimates firm specific indexes of technical efficiency for the Brazilian plastics and steel industries. Two different indexes are employed for the empirical estimates—the Farrell index and an index developed from a linear programming approximation of a nonstochastic frontier production function specified in the Cobb-Douglas functional form. Evidence of substantial relative technical inefficiency is revealed. In both industries only a very small proportion of all the observed firms were producing amounts of output greater than 80 percent of that technically possible on the estimated frontier. Relative efficiency of the firms in the two industries was not seen to be significantly related to ownership (foreign or government), but tests did suggest a tendency for larger firms, possessing larger market shares, to be closer to the frontier than smaller firms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Inequalities and the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil: analyzing un-coordinated responses in social assistance and education.
- Author
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Segatto, Catarina Ianni, Pimentel dos Santos, Fernando Burgos, Bichir, Renata Mirandola, and Morandi, Eliana Lins
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIALIZATION ,HEALTH equity ,SOCIETAL reaction ,COVID-19 - Abstract
This paper contributes to discussions about subnational responses to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in federal countries. In the scholarship on federalism and public policy, few studies seek to understand the factors that shape subnational differences in welfare levels. This article seeks to better understand this issue in Brazil by exploring how, in a context with little national-level coordination, subnational governments tackle the inequalities exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. This study analyzes two social policy areas with distinct national-level coordination mechanisms and federal responsibilities: social assistance and education. Two multi-level cases are examined: the states of Amazonas and São Paulo and the cities of Manaus and São Paulo. This analysis relies on quantitative data, mainly social indicators, and qualitative data collected through documents and in-depth interviews. Social assistance and education policy actors in Amazonas and São Paulo faced at times significant obstacles adapting and/or creating policies to tackle inequalities, resulting in a fend-foryourself federalism and fragmented subnational policies. Differences in subnational responses can be explained by distinct policy legacies and previous capacity, which were key in organizing a useful response to the pandemic. However, to fully explain subnational responses, the role of actors within institutional contexts must also be taken into account. In social assistance, shared responsibilities among different levels of government led to competition and credit claiming dynamics, reinforcing fragmented and uncoordinated responses. In education, decentralization and more stable funding allowed political leadership to activate and mobilize subnational capacities and other actors at the subnational level, producing more sustainable responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The reality of the dead in Brazil: perspectives on identification in forensic anthropology.
- Author
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Cunha, Eugénia, Algee-Hewitt, Bridget, and Calmon, Melina
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FORENSIC anthropology ,IDENTIFICATION of the dead ,DATABASE management - Abstract
Forensic Sci Res. 2022; 7. 2 Miamoto P, Uehara C. Personal identification and missing persons initiatives in Santa Catarina state, Brazil: forensic perspectives from 2019 to 2021. Invited authors were forensic anthropology practitioners in Brazil representing the main cities in which practice is being pursued. What is the current state of Forensic Anthropology in Brazil and where do we stand when identification is concerned?. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Iatrogenic stigma in outpatient treatment for Hansen's disease (leprosy) in Brazil.
- Author
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White, Cassandra
- Subjects
SOCIAL stigma ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,HANSEN'S disease treatment ,PATIENTS ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper explores how iatrogenic stigma, or stigma that is produced through a patient's encounter with physicians or with biomedicine in general, might emerge in outpatient treatment for Hansen's disease, or leprosy. Based on in-depth interviews with people affected by Hansen's disease and observations conducted at several public health clinics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, this research identified several aspects of the biomedical encounter that generated or contributed to stigma, either felt or enacted. Also noted in the research were positive examples of techniques used by physicians and health care workers for minimizing or circumventing stigma. The paper touches upon several topics, such as culturally mediated responses to medication side effects and communication between health care workers and patients, that might be salient or useful for health educators and others who are attempting to reduce health-related stigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
22. Brazilian Response to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Epidemic among Injection Drug Users.
- Author
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Mesquita, Fábio, Doneda, Denise, Gandolfi, Denise, Nemes, Maria Inês Battistella, Andrade, Tarcísio, Bueno, Regina, and Trigueiros, Daniela Piconez e
- Subjects
DRUG abuse ,HIV ,INJECTIONS ,MEDICAL care ,EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Clinical Infectious Diseases is the property of Oxford University Press / USA 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
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Evaluating the impact of contracting out basic health care services in the state of São Paulo, Brazil.
- Author
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Greve, Jane, Pereira Coelho, Vera Schattan Ruas, and Schattan Ruas Pereira Coelho, Vera
- Subjects
MEDICAL care ,MUNICIPAL government ,HOSPITAL care ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PRIMARY health care - Abstract
As a means of dealing with shortcomings in the coverage, quality and efficiency of the public health care sector, several municipalities in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, have started to contract pre-certified non-profit or non-governmental organizations to take part in the delivery of health care services.This paper explores the impact of introducing these contracts in the primary health care sector. Using data on the 645 municipalities in the state of São Paulo and difference-in-differences methods, we estimate the effect of contracting out in the primary health care sector on various dimensions of mortality and health care use. The results show that implementation of the contracting out strategy significantly increases the number of primary health care appointments by approximately one appointment per user of the national health care system per year. Point estimates indicate a reducing effect on hospitalization for preventable diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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24. Patient perceptions of continuity of health care and associated factors. Cross-sectional study in municipalities of central Colombia and north-eastern Brazil.
- Author
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Vargas, Ingrid, Garcia-Subirats, Irene, Mogollón-Pérez, Amparo Susana, De Paepe, Pierre, da Silva, Maria Rejane Ferreira, Unger, Jean-Pierre, Aller, M. B., and Vázquez, María Luisa
- Subjects
PATIENT compliance ,PATIENT psychology ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL quality control ,KNOWLEDGE transfer ,CONTINUUM of care ,MEDICAL care research ,PRIMARY health care ,SOCIAL classes ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Despite the fragmentation of healthcare provision being considered one of the main obstacles to attaining effective health care in Latin America, very little is known about patients' perceptions. This paper analyses the level of continuity of health care perceived by users and explores influencing factors in two municipalities of Colombia and Brazil, by means of a cross-sectional study based on a survey of a multistage probability sample of people who had suffered at least one health problem within the previous three months (2163 in Colombia; 2167 in Brazil). An adapted and validated version of the CCAENA© (Questionnaire of care continuity across levels of health care) was applied. Logistic regression models were generated to assess the relationship between perceptions of the different types of health care continuity and sociodemographic characteristics, health needs, and organizational factors. The results show lower levels of continuity across care levels in information transfer and care coherence and higher levels for the ongoing patient-doctor relationship, albeit with differences between the two countries. They also show greater consistency of doctors in the Brazilian study areas, especially in primary care. Consistency of doctors was not only positively associated with the patient-doctor ongoing relationship in the study areas of both countries, but also with information transfer and care coherence across care levels. The study area and health needs (the latter negatively for patients with poor self-rated health and positively for those with at least one chronic condition) were associated with all types of continuity of care. The influence of the sex or income varied depending on the country. The influence of the insurance scheme in the Colombian sample was not statistically significant. Both countries should implement policies to improve coordination between care levels, especially regarding information transfer and job stability for primary care doctors, both key factors to guarantee quality of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Beef production and carcass evaluation in Brazil.
- Author
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Nunes, Cris Luana de Castro, Pflanzer, Sérgio Bertelli, Rezende-de-Souza, Jonatã Henrique, and Chizzotti, Mario Luiz
- Subjects
BEEF quality ,BEEF industry ,BEEF carcasses ,MEAT quality ,CATTLE crossbreeding ,FEEDLOTS ,BEEF cattle breeds ,BOVINE spongiform encephalopathy - Abstract
This article provides an overview of beef production and carcass evaluation in Brazil. It highlights Brazil's significant role in the global beef market and its record-breaking export revenues. However, Brazil lacks a national carcass grading system, with slaughterhouses using their own metrics to meet market demands. The current standard for carcass classification in Brazil is based on dentition, gender, carcass weight, and subcutaneous/external fat scores. The article also discusses beef cattle production systems, market statistics, and the need for a new Brazilian classification and grading system that incorporates eating quality parameters and technological advancements. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Experiences of social stigma of people living with Hansen's disease in Brazil: silencing, secrets and exclusion.
- Author
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Souza, Gabriella Carrijo, Oliveira, Poliana Silva de, Araujo, Priscila Norié de, Santos, Felipe Lima dos, Silva, Janaina Pereira da, Santos, Karen da Silva, and Fortuna, Cinira Magali
- Subjects
HANSEN'S disease ,SOCIAL stigma ,SOCIAL isolation ,MEDICAL personnel ,CONTINUING education - Abstract
Background Hansen's disease is a chronic, infectious and transmissible disease that is considered a public health problem in Brazil. Hansen's disease is marked by stigma and prejudice, because it carries with it a strong negative social image, reinforced by policies of social isolation in the community. Methods A qualitative study was conducted in Ribeirão Preto, an inland city of the state of São Paulo, Brazil. Eleven patients under treatment for the disease were interviewed. The interviews were audio recorded and transcribed in full, then were analyzed through the stages of transcription, transposition and reconstitution, as informed by concepts proposed by Goffman. Results The results showed that the marks of stigma are still present in the twenty-first century and were presented in two axes: 'Stigma and work for the person affected by Hansen's disease' and 'The experience of stigma in the family'. The participants refer to fears of losing their jobs and of being ridiculed, which stops them talking about the disease. Regarding their families, the participants reported episodes of discrimination, the creation of family secrets and fear of relatives' reactions. Conclusions All these aspects interfere in the follow-up and treatment of patients and need to be considered and welcomed by health professionals. It is recommended that these aspects are addressed in the initial training and continuing education of health professionals. Contexte La maladie de Hansen est une maladie chronique, infectieuse et transmissible, considérée comme un problème de santé publique au Brésil. La maladie de Hansen est marquée par la stigmatisation et les préjugés, car elle véhicule une image sociale fortement négative, renforcée par des politiques d'isolement social au sein de la communauté. Méthodes Étude qualitative menée à Ribeirão Preto, une ville intérieure de l'État de São Paulo, au Brésil. Onze patients traités pour la maladie ont été interrogés. Les entretiens ont été enregistrés et transcrits intégralement, et ont été analysés en suivant les étapes de transcription, de transposition et de reconstitution, selon les concepts proposés par Goffman. Résultats Les résultats montrent que les marques de la stigmatisation sont toujours présentes au 21ème siècle et ont été présentées selon deux axes : 'La stigmatisation et le travail pour la personne affectée par la maladie de Hansen' et 'L'expérience de la stigmatisation dans la famille'. Les participants évoquent la peur de perdre leur emploi, la peur d'être ridiculisés, ce qui les pousse à ne pas parler de la maladie. En ce qui concerne les familles, les participants ont rapporté des épisodes de discrimination, la création de secrets de famille et la peur des réactions des proches. Conclusions Tous ces aspects interfèrent dans le suivi et le traitement des patients et doivent être pris en compte et accueillis par les professionnels de la santé. Il est recommandé que ces aspects soient abordés dans la formation initiale et la formation continue des professionnels de la santé. Antecedentes La enfermedad de Hansen es una enfermedad crónica, infecciosa y transmisible, considerada un problema de salud pública en Brasil. La enfermedad de Hansen está marcada por el estigma y el prejuicio, ya que conlleva una fuerte imagen social negativa, reforzada por políticas de aislamiento social en la comunidad. Métodos Estudio cualitativo realizado en Ribeirão Preto, una ciudad del interior del estado de São Paulo, Brasil. Se entrevistaron a once pacientes en tratamiento para la enfermedad. Las entrevistas fueron grabadas en audio, transcritas en su totalidad y analizadas a través de etapas de transcripción, transposición y reconstitución, según los conceptos propuestos por Goffman. Resultados Los resultados muestran que las marcas del estigma siguen presentes en el siglo XXI y se presentaron en dos ejes: 'Estigma y trabajo para la persona afectada por la enfermedad de Hansen' y 'La experiencia del estigma en la familia'. Los participantes mencionan el miedo a perder sus trabajos, el temor a ser ridiculizados, lo que les impide comentar sobre la enfermedad. En cuanto a las familias, los participantes reportaron episodios de discriminación, la creación de secretos familiares y el miedo a las reacciones de los familiares. Conclusiones Todos estos aspectos interfieren en el seguimiento y tratamiento de los pacientes y deben ser considerados y acogidos por los profesionales sanitarios. Se recomienda abordar estos aspectos en la formación inicial y la educación continua de los profesionales sanitarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Silicon applications in rice plants alter the stylet probing behaviors of Glyphepomis spinosa (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae).
- Author
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Coutinho, Walter Baida Garcia, Silva, Franciele Cristina da, Barrigossi, José Alexandre Freitas, Almeida, André Cirilo de Sousa, and Jesus, Flávio Gonçalves de
- Subjects
STINKBUGS ,HEMIPTERA ,RICE diseases & pests ,RICE ,POTASSIUM silicate - Abstract
The stink bug Glyphepomis spinosa Campos & Grazia (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) is a potential rice pest in Brazil. This study evaluates the interaction between silicon sources and 3 rice cultivars (BRS Esmeralda, Canela de Ferro, and IRGA 417) and examines how increasing silicon levels affect the stylet probing behavior of G. spinosa. The experiment was set up in a completely randomized design with a 3 × 3 factorial scheme (silicon sources: calcium silicate, potassium silicate, a control, and 3 rice cultivars). Fertilizing rice plants with Si altered the probing behavior of the stink bug G. spinosa. The cultivar interaction by Si source was significant in a few variables. This was evidenced by longer periods without ingestion, prolonged time to the first stylet probe (initial probing), and less time spent in cellular maceration. This result supports the use of electropenetrography as a tool to evaluate resistance inducers in plants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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28. MARGINAL SAVINGS RATES IN THE DEVELOPMENT PROCESS: THE BRAZILIAN EXPERIENCE.
- Author
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Leff, Nathaniel H.
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SAVINGS ,ECONOMIC conditions in Brazil ,SOCIAL movements ,SOCIAL change ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This paper is a study of the behaviour of the aggregate savings coefficient in the course of Brazilian development. Brazil is especially useful for such a case-study. Unlike most less-developed countries, many of the economic and social changes and the policy measures which have been suggested on a priori grounds as conducive to raising marginal savings rates have in fact taken place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
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29. "I Am The Book"--Deaf Poets' Views on Signed Poetry.
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Sutton-Spence, Rachel and de Quadros, Ronice Müller
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,AUTHORS ,COMPUTER software ,DEAFNESS ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH funding ,SIGN language ,DISABILITIES ,POETRY (Literary form) - Abstract
Despite research commenting on and analyzing signed poetry, there is little research exploring the aims and intentions of the signing poets. This paper considers the producers of signed poetry, rather than their products. Using material gathered from interviews with three established signing deaf poets, we consider what they hope to achieve when they perform their poetry, including who they aim their work at, and how their perceived audiences influence their performances. This allows us to understand more clearly what challenges audiences face when trying to understand the poetry and how the poets can help audiences meet those challenges. We find that signing poets understand how deaf audiences have been conditioned to respond to poetry, and create connections between themselves and deaf audiences by using the shared specific cultural and linguistic experiences of deaf people. Although deaf audiences are their ultimate preferred audiences, poets welcome hearing audiences, especially if their engagement with the poetry leads to increased understanding of Deaf culture or encourages them to learn sign language. The close, embodied relationship between the poet, poem, and audience makes them inseparable. Written poetry may be abstracted and contained in a book; in contrast, the signing poet is, in effect, the book. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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30. The Human Values Index: conceptual foundations and evidence from Brazil.
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Comim, Flavio and Amaral, Pedro V.
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HUMAN Development Index ,SOCIAL justice ,ECONOMIC development ,WELFARE economics - Abstract
The dominance of the ‘growth fetish’ ideology has much contributed to lure societies into believing that people’s value judgements are unnecessary for a better life and social justice. The theme ‘human values’ became the central research topic for the United Nations Development Programme Human Development Report team in Brazil after the promotion of a nationwide consultation to choose the focus of its 2009/10 report. A new index, named the Human Values Index (HVI), was created to tackle the issue of human values as part of development strategies. The main objective of this paper is to introduce this index, showing its features and properties. The HVI is built on an understanding that development is not a value-neutral concept and that from a human development perspective, welfare indicators should be qualitatively closer to human values focusing on statistics that can be useful to ordinary citizens, with the hope that in their hands the HVI might become a useful tool in promoting public reasoning and social justice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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31. Intergovernmental health policy decisions in Brazil: cooperation strategies for political mediation.
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HEALTH ,DECISION making ,BRAZILIAN politics & government, 2003- - Abstract
The advantages of established intergovernmental decision-making arenas for the implementation of health policies in decentralized settings are not well known. This paper presents the case of the joint health management committee, known as the Tripartite Committee, created to formalize intergovernmental decisions about the implementation of policies of the Brazilian Unified Health System. This paper adopts a descriptive approach for the strategic analysis of decision process among governmental actors from three federative levels, as well as of mechanisms for the negotiation of their interests in the formalization of health policy agreements. The roles and positions of governmental actors within the Tripartite Committee were analysed, together with the definition of decision agendas and strategies. The data come from normative documents and proceedings of the Tripartite Committee, interviews with their governmental actors and observations of their meetings. The distinct governmental actors from the Tripartite Committee employed cooperation strategies with permanent negotiations oriented towards interchanges and political mediation. The power of the federal Government is also pre-eminent for the constitution of decision agendas and in the shaping of negotiation processes and priorities. The Tripartite Committee formalized agreements between unequal administrative and political powers to ensure a systemic integration of governmental policies and a self-regulation of the political autonomies. There are some divergences within the governmental actors interpretation of key policies and processes in this decision arena; the primacy of political or technical criteria as well as the applicability of laws or ad hoc norms. Although such cooperation strategies may slow down the decision-making process and render it more complicated, they also define more clearly areas of institutional responsibility and ensure a broader support from different levels of government for the implementation of public health policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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32. “A Gift from God”: Adolescent Motherhood and Religion in Brazilian Favelas.
- Author
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Steele, Liza G.
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RELIGIOUS ethics ,TEENAGE mothers ,UNMARRIED mothers ,RELIGION & sociology ,CHURCH work with unmarried mothers - Abstract
This study seeks to understand how young, unmarried mothers and mothers-to-be in the favelas (shantytowns) of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, have experienced religious morality as applied to themselves and other adolescents in their communities, as well as how religious leaders grapple with the moral issue of unmarried adolescent maternity in their midst. Drawing on more than 50 interviews conducted in Rio with young mothers, Catholic and evangelical religious leaders who work with the poor, and staff members of non-governmental organizations, this paper seeks to understand the acceptance—or even approval—that unmarried pregnant teens and adolescent mothers usually encounter, which casts doubt on whether the issue is actually posing a moral dilemma for these religious institutions. The realities of everyday life in Rio's favelas, most prominently the ever-present specter of violence, high rates of teen motherhood, strong popular opposition to abortion, the high value accorded to motherhood, and the intense competition of the religious marketplace appear to influence the ways in which favela residents and religious leaders understand and interpret morality. More generally, this study offers an example of how religious groups working in impoverished communities throughout the world might adapt traditional moral codes to suit their circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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33. First speckle interferometric measurements at the Observatório do Pico dos Dias of the Laboratório Nacional de Astrofísica.
- Author
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Guerrero, C A, Souza, T B, Campos, R P, Borges Fernandes, M, and Campagnolo, J C N
- Subjects
- *
BINARY stars , *SPECKLE interferometry , *METEOROLOGICAL observations , *ANGULAR distance - Abstract
In this paper we present the first speckle interferometric measurements of binary stars performed at the Observatório do Pico dos Dias of the Laboratório Nacional de Astrofísica in Brazil, using the 1.60 m Perkin-Elmer telescope. In order to carry out these observations, we had to perform an opto-mechanical modification to Camera 1 of the 1.60 m to meet the specifications of the observational programme. We focused our efforts on objects from the Washington Double Star Catalogue that were obtained during four observing runs allocated in 2017 and 2018. Among these objects, we have been interested in performing a follow-up observation of double stars discovered by the Hipparcos mission. We report here 464 astrometric measurements of 139 pairs, with angular separations ranging from 0.09 to 6.36 arcsec, including 361 systems with separations smaller than 1 arcsec. We estimated a mean error in separation of 15 mas and 1 |${^{\circ}_{.}}$| 2 in position angle. We confirmed 15 double stars discovered by Hipparcos, as well as four new pairs observed in previously known binaries turning them into triple systems, three of which have separations smaller than 0.16 arcsec. With these observations we introduce a new instrument to the astronomical community available at the Observatório do Pico dos Dias, capable of identifying relatively bright binaries, with angular separation very close to the resolution power of the telescope. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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34. What the United States can learn from Brazil in response to HIV/AIDS: international reputation and strategic centralization in a context of health policy devolution.
- Author
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Gómez, Eduardo J.
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HIV ,HEALTH policy ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,CIVIL society - Abstract
Contrary to what many may expect, this article argues that Brazil did a better job than the USA when it came to responding to HIV/AIDS. Because of the Brazilian government’s concern about its international reputation and the partnerships it has forged with international donors and civil society, the government has been committed to strengthening decentralization processes by introducing both formal and informal re-centralization measures that strengthen health policy devolution, while effectively targeting the biggest at-risk groups. The US, in contrast, has not achieved these objectives, due to its lack of interest in increasing its international reputation and its focus on bi-lateral aid rather than investing in domestic policy. The paper closes by explaining the lessons that Brazil can teach the US and other large federations seeking to ensure that decentralization and prevention policy work more effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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35. Challenging subtle forms of power in deliberation: A case-study on the future of Hansen's disease colonies in Brazil.
- Author
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Mendonça, Ricardo Fabrino
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POWER (Social sciences) ,COLONIZATION ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
This paper analyses a micro-deliberative process in order to discuss how subtle forms of power pervade discussions and are challenged in them. The study of the First National Seminar of Former Hansen's Disease Colonies, held in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) in 2004, shows how the power to set the agenda and the power to claim credibility to one's utterances from sources other than reason may generate inequalities among participants. The analysis also reveals these forms of power are often challenged throughout communicative exchanges. Sometimes a clash of different forms of power may help in overcoming asymmetries. Based on these findings, it is suggested micro-deliberative arenas should be as heterogeneous as possible and connected to other deliberative arenas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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36. Analysis of greenhouse gases in the emissions of Brazilian freight transport.
- Author
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Kiyota, André Shigueo, Yoshizaki, Hugo Tsugunobu Yoshida, and Massara, Vanessa Meloni
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GREENHOUSE gases research ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,RAILROAD freight service ,RAILROADS ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
The paper presents the preliminary results of tests carried out to calculate the emissions in the sector of railway freight transport in Brazil. The analysis is based on a proposition derived from a European model to determine the factors relevant to designing a model suitable for the characteristics of Brazilian cities. In this simulation the Artemis model is used with positive results for determination of the greenhouse gases in the route between the states of Mato Grosso and São Paulo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Yeast selection for fuel ethanol production in Brazil.
- Author
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Basso, Luiz C., de Amorim, Henrique V., de Oliveira, Antonio J., and Lopes, Mario L.
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YEAST ,ETHANOL as fuel ,SACCHAROMYCES cerevisiae ,GLYCERIN ,BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Brazil is one of the largest ethanol biofuel producers and exporters in the world and its production has increased steadily during the last three decades. The increasing efficiency of Brazilian ethanol plants has been evident due to the many technological contributions. As far as yeast is concerned, few publications are available regarding the industrial fermentation processes in Brazil. The present paper reports on a yeast selection program performed during the last 12 years aimed at selecting Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains suitable for fermentation of sugar cane substrates (cane juice and molasses) with cell recycle, as it is conducted in Brazilian bioethanol plants. As a result, some evidence is presented showing the positive impact of selected yeast strains in increasing ethanol yield and reducing production costs, due to their higher fermentation performance (high ethanol yield, reduced glycerol and foam formation, maintenance of high viability during recycling and very high implantation capability into industrial fermenters). Results also suggest that the great yeast biodiversity found in distillery environments could be an important source of strains. This is because during yeast cell recycling, selective pressure (an adaptive evolution) is imposed on cells, leading to strains with higher tolerance to the stressful conditions of the industrial fermentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Prevention of "Risky" Drinking among Students at a Brazilian University.
- Author
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Simão, Maria Odete, Kerr-Corrêa, Florence, Smaira, Sumaia I., Trinca, Luzia A., Floripes, Tricia M. F., Dalben, Ivete, Martins, Raul A., Oliveira, Janaina B., Cavariani, Mariana B., and Tucci, Adriana M.
- Subjects
PREVENTION of alcoholism ,SUBSTANCE use of college students ,YOUTH & alcohol ,ALCOHOLISM treatment ,ALCOHOL drinking ,BINGE drinking ,COLLEGE students - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this paper was to compare the quantity and frequency of alcohol use and its associated negative consequences between two groups of college students who were identified as being "risky drinkers." Subjects were randomly allocated in a clinical trial to intervention or control groups. Methods: Risky drinking use was defined as Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) ⩾8 and/or Rutgers Alcohol Problem Index (RAPI) ⩾5 problems in the previous year. Students who had undergone the Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students (BASICS) (N = 145 at baseline; 142 at 12 months, and 103 at 24 months, loss of 29.7%) were compared with a control group (N = 121 at baseline; 121 at 12 months and 113 at 24 months, loss of 9.3%), the nonintervention group. Variables included drinking frequency, quantity and peak consumption, dependence assessment, and family and friends' abuse assessment. Results: Treated students at a 24-month follow-up decreased quantity of alcohol use per occasion and lowered AUDIT and RAPT scores. Conclusions: This is the first brief intervention work on risky drinking with college students in Brazil and the results are encouraging. However, it is difficult to conduct individual prevention strategies in a country where culture fosters heavy drinking through poor public policy on alcohol and lack of law enforcement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. EXPOSING CORRUPT POLITICIANS: THE EFFECTS OF BRAZIL'S PUBLICLY RELEASED AUDITS ON ELECTORAL OUTCOMES.
- Author
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Ferraz, Claudio and Finan, Frederico
- Subjects
POLITICAL corruption ,CORRUPT practices in elections ,POLITICIANS ,AUDITING ,FEDERAL government ,PUBLIC spending ,MUNICIPAL finance ,LOCAL government - Abstract
This paper uses publicly released audit reports to study the effects of disclosing information about corruption practices on electoral accountability. In 2003, as part of an anticorruption program, Brazil's federal government began to select municipalities at random to audit their expenditures of federally transferred funds. The findings of these audits were then made publicly available and disseminated to media sources. Using a data set on corruption constructed from the audit reports, we compare the electoral outcomes of municipalities audited before versus after the 2004 elections, with the same levels of reported corruption. We show that the release of the audit outcomes had a significant impact on incumbents' electoral performance, and that these effects were more pronounced in municipalities where local radio was present to divulge the information. Our findings highlight the value of having a more informed electorate and the role played by local media in enhancing political selection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Hand skill assessment with a reduced version of the Peg Moving Task (PMT-5) in children: Normative data and application in children with cerebral palsy
- Author
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Nunes, Gilberto, Braga, Lucia Willadino, Rossi, Luciana, Lawisch, Vera Lucia, Nunes, Luiz Guilherme Nadal, and Dellatolas, Georges
- Subjects
CEREBRAL palsy ,CHILDREN ,CLINICAL medicine ,HEMIPLEGIA - Abstract
Abstract: This paper proposes a simple method of hand skill assessment in children that can be useful in clinical practice. A reduced 5-hole version of Annett''s Peg Moving Task was used to quantify hand skill bilaterally in 435 normally developing preschool and school-children, and adolescents aged 3–18 years from Brazil. The cross-cultural validity of the normative data obtained in Brazil was verified in 157 school-children aged 6–11 years from France. An application in 76 children with cerebral palsy (hemiplegia 21, diplegia 34, triplegia 6, mixed type 15) showed very important variability of the deficits in hand function within each subtype of cerebral palsy (CP). Hand deficits were more severe in children in special schools than in children in regular schools within each CP subtype. A qualitative analysis showed which difficulties during the execution of the task were specific to children with CP and which were also observed in normally developing children. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Chiropterophily in Sinningieae (Gesneriaceae): Sinningia brasiliensis and Paliavana prasinata are bat-pollinated, but P. sericiflora is not. Not yet?
- Author
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SANMARTIN-GAJARDO, IVONNE and SAZIMA, MARLIES
- Subjects
GESNERIACEAE ,HORTICULTURE ,POLLINATION ,SEED dispersal by bats - Abstract
• Background and Aims Based on the bell shape and greenish colour of the flowers, bat-pollination was suggested for some Sinningieae species (Gesneriaceae). Actually, there are no reports on pollination biology and visitors for these species. This paper reports on pollination biology of Sinningia brasiliensis, Paliavana prasinata and P. sericiflora in south-eastern Brazil.• Methods Flowers were observed in situ to determine phases of anthesis, colour patterns and scent intensity. Corolla measures were taken from fresh flowers. Nectar production and concentration were measured in flowers bagged at the pre-anthesis phases. Direct visual observations of visitors were made during the day and night, and photographs were taken to analyse their visiting behaviour.• Key Results Some floral features of the three species fit the bat-pollination syndrome: large, robust and gullet-shaped corollas, colour patterns and large amount of nectar. However, other floral features—such as onset of anthesis, nectar attributes and odour intensity—differ among the species. Nectar volume and total sugar production increased significantly at midnight in S. brasiliensis and P. prasinata, but in P. sericiflora there were no significant differences in the total nectar and sugar production during anthesis. Scent intensity is much higher in S. brasiliensis and P. prasinata than P. sericiflora. Flowers of S. brasiliensis and P. prasinata, whose features fit the chiropterophilous syndrome, are pollinated by glossophagine bat species. Paliavana sericiflora, on the other hand, presents floral features intermediate between bat and hummingbird syndromes, but is visited and pollinated only by hummingbirds.• Conclusions These data strengthen the statement that the bat syndrome in Sinningieae originated independently in Sinningia brasiliensis and in Paliavana species. Paliavana sericiflora may be another example of a plant ‘in transition’ from the hummingbird to the bat pollination, but a reversion in the direction of bat to hummingbird might not be excluded. It is also possible that this is a case of speciation on both bat and hummingbird pollination. Studies on Paliavana sister species may provide insights about origins and the evolutionary directions of the pollination systems of these species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. MICROSATELLITE ANALYSIS OF A HYBRID ZONE BETWEEN CHROMOSOMALLY DIVERGENT POPULATIONS OF CTENOMYS MINUTUS FROM SOUTHERN BRAZIL (RODENTIA: CTENOMYIDAE).
- Author
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Gava, Adriana and De Freitas, Thales R. O.
- Subjects
MICROSATELLITE repeats ,CHROMOSOMES ,CTENOMYS ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,POPULATION genetics - Abstract
This paper describes variation at 6 microsatellite loci in 107 specimens of Ctenomys minutus from a chromosomal hybrid zone on the coastal plain of southern Brazil. Of the 56 alleles uncovered in this study, 39.2% are exclusive to alternative cytotypes or the contact populations. Clinal variation is not obvious because there are no microsatellite fixed differences among chromosomally divergent populations, but variation at Hai 2 locus is gradual across the zone. The local populations are highly differentiated and structured. The moderate estimated values of gene flow follow an isolation-by-distance model, which predicts concentration of an allele or a homozygous genotype in patches with generations of individuals with limited dispersal and mating by proximity. Analysis of populations distantly localized from the contact zone probably will provide further insights in the genetic relationship among cytotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Variation in the Loss of Seed Dormancy during After-ripening of Wild and Cultivated Rice Species.
- Author
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VEASEY, E. A., KARASAWA, M. G., SANTOS, P. P., ROSA, M. S., MAMANI, E., and OLIVEIRA, G. C. X.
- Subjects
SEEDS ,RICE varieties ,GERMINATION ,WILD rice - Abstract
• Background and Aims The aim of this paper was to verify the variation in the loss of seed dormancy during after-ripening and the interspecific and interpopulation variability in the degree of dormancy of seven wild and two cultivated rice species comprising 21 populations and two cultivars.• Methods Four wild rice species from South America, Oryza glumaepatula, O. latifolia, O. grandiglumis and O. alta, and two O. sativa cultivars were tested in one experiment. In a second experiment, five wild species, O. punctata, O. eichingeri, O.rufipogon, O. latifolia and O. glumaepatula, and one cultivated species (O. glaberrima) were evaluated. Initial germination tests were performed soon after the seeds were harvested and subsequently at 2-month intervals, for a total of six storage periods in the first experiment and three in the second. All tests were conducted in the dark at a temperature of 27 °C.• Key Results Different patterns of after-ripening among populations within and between species were observed.• Conclusions The cultivated species (O. sativa and O. glaberrima) and, amongst the wild species, the tetraploids O. latifolia, O. grandiglumis and the diploids O. eichingeri and O. punctata, had weak dormancy, losing it completely 2 months after harvest, while O. rufipogon and O. glumaepatula exhibited pronounced dormancy. The latter showed different patterns of after-ripening between populations indigenous to the Amazon region and those originating in the Paraguay River system. Seeds of Solimões (Amazon) and Japura origin showed weak dormancy whereas those of Paraguay origin showed deep dormancy. Ecological differences among natural habitats may be involved in such differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Floral Traits and Pollination Systems in the Caatinga, a Brazilian Tropical Dry Forest.
- Author
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MACHADO, ISABEL CRISTINA and LOPES, ARIADNA VALENTINA
- Subjects
POLLINATION ,FLOWERS ,PLANT fertilization ,BIOTIC communities ,CAATINGA plants ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
• Background and aims Pollination is a critical stage in plant reproduction and thus in the maintenance and evolution of species and communities. The Caatinga is the fourth largest ecosystem in Brazil, but despite its great extent and its importance few studies providing ecological information are available, with a notable lack of work focusing on pollination biology. Here, general data are presented regarding the frequency of pollination systems within Caatinga communities, with the aim of characterizing patterns related to floral attributes in order to make possible comparisons with data for plant communities in other tropical areas, and to test ideas about the utility of syndromes. This paper also intends to provide a reference point for further studies on pollination ecology in this threatened ecosystem.• Methods The floral traits and the pollination systems of 147 species were analysed in three areas of Caatinga vegetation in northeastern Brazil, and compared with world-wide studies focusing on the same subject. For each species, floral attributes were recorded as form, size, colour, rewards and pollination units. The species were grouped into 12 guilds according to the main pollinator vector. Analyses of the frequencies of the floral traits and pollination systems were undertaken.• Key Results Nectar and pollen were the most common floral resources and insect pollination was the most frequent, occurring in 69·9 % of the studied species. Of the entomophilous species, 61·7 % were considered to be melittophilous (43·1 % of the total). Vertebrate pollination occurred in 28·1 % of the species (ornithophily in 15·0 % and chiropterophily in 13·1 %), and anemophily was recorded in only 2·0 %.• Conclusions The results indicated that the pollination systems in Caatinga, despite climatic restrictions, are diversified, with a low percentage of generalist flowers, and similar to other tropical dry and wet forest communities, including those with high rainfall levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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45. `I'M SORRY EVERYBODY, BUT THIS IS BRAZIL' Armed Robbery on the Buses in Brazilian Cities.
- Author
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Paes-Machado, Eduardo and Levenstein, Charles
- Subjects
CRIMES aboard buses ,LOCAL transit crime ,VIOLENT crimes ,ROBBERY ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
This paper examines violent crimes on the public transport system in a large Brazilian city. The research included 191 interviews with workers, labour union officials, users, managers, and the police officers and the examination of 88 police records and 26 criminal investigations. Robberies are seen as interactive, relatively unexpected though common events. We interpreted bus robbery as a psychological power game generating financial loss, injuries and fatalities, racial tensions and harsh policing We evaluated the efficiency of law and order measures taken to combat bus crime, including the excessive use of force by the police. The study concludes that improved policing social policies, targeting poor and black-mulatto youths, who make up most of the young offenders involved, should be implemented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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46. Case Management of Human Immunodeficiency Virus--Infected Injection Drug Users: A Case Study in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
- Author
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Malta, Mônica, Carneiro-da-Cunha, Claudia, Kerrigan, Deanna, Strathdee, Steffanie A., Monteiro, Maristela, and Bastos, Francisco Inácio
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HIV ,PUBLIC health ,INJECTIONS ,DRUG abuse ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The provision of care and support to persons living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Brazil who also use drugs and/or alcohol represents special challenges because of the combined effects of addiction, poverty, stigma, and discrimination. This paper presents details on a program providing both clinic- and field- based care to HIV-infected injection drug users, highlighting the use of a specialized case management approach to address the clinical and psychosocial needs of this population. This program includes both a mobile case management team that fosters group discussions and provides individual counseling, and provision of medical consultations at 2 major drug treatment centers in Rio de Janeiro. The article also describes the experience of working with injection drug users who regularly attend an outpatient clinic serving marginalized communities through the use of mutual self-help groups and specialized support groups to address to issue of adherence to antiretroviral therapies for the treatment of HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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47. Ancestry estimation in forensic anthropology: accuracy of the AncesTrees software in a Brazilian sample.
- Author
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Jacometti, Victor, Guimarães, Marco Aurelio, Moraes, Luis Otávio Carvalho de, Marques, Sérgio Ricardo, Cunha, Eugénia, and Silva, Ricardo Henrique Alves da
- Subjects
FORENSIC anthropology ,FIX-point estimation ,DATABASES ,GENEALOGY ,BRAZILIANS ,COMPUTER software - Abstract
The objective of this study is to analyze the accuracy and applicability of the AncesTrees software with respect to a set of cranial measurements of a Brazilian sample consisting of 114 identified skulls from two osteological collections, predominantly composed of European (n = 59), African (n = 35), and admixed individuals (n = 20). Twenty-four different craniometric measurements are performed and input to AncesTrees via two algorithms, one of which is used in three configurations, with different ancestral groups integrated in the model. The software exhibits superior performance in the estimation of European individuals, reaching 73% accuracy, compared with 66% in the African individuals. Those individuals classified as admixed produce a variety of ancestral classifications, mainly European. Overall, the most accurate combination of AncesTrees is obtained using ancestralForest with only the European and African groups integrated into the algorithm, where the accuracy reaches 70%. The applicability of this software to a specific population is fragile because of the high admixing load, making it necessary to create a more representative anthropometric database of the Brazilian people. Key points Ancestry estimation methods are seldom validated in Brazil. AncesTrees performed poorly on our sample, with a maximum accuracy of 70%. Brazil's highly mixed population hinders ancestry estimation. Mixed individuals (pardos) are predominantly classified as Europeans. The insertion of Brazilian metric data into the AncesTrees database would produce better results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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48. The case for reindustrialisation in developing countries: towards the connection between the macroeconomic regime and the industrial policy in Brazil.
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Nassif, André, Bresser-Pereira, Luiz Carlos, and Feijo, Carmem
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INDUSTRIAL policy ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC development ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,LABOR productivity - Abstract
The majority of economic literature tends to discuss economic development issues by analysing the industrial policy and other long-term development policies separate from short-term macroeconomic policy. However, development strategies require a close coordination of the macroeconomic regime with the industrial policy. In addition to Brazil, our analytical discussion and normative implications can be addressed to other developing countries also facing premature deindustrialisation. We propose an analytical discussion of the phenomena of industrialisation, deindustrialisation and reindustrialisation, including a discussion on the connection between the macroeconomic regime and industrial policy, both oriented to reindustrialisation and catching up. The main point is that both policy regimes must be closely coordinated with each other. Concerning the macroeconomic regime, we argue that consistent monetary, fiscal, wage and exchange rate policies are those which are able to not only keep price stabilisation, but also provide average real interest rates below the average real return rates on capital, a competitive real exchange rate and real wage rates increasing in accordance with labour productivity growth. As for industrial policy, theoretical and empirical evidence suggest strategies aimed at the diversification of production, processes and products, especially within the manufacturing sector and within tradable segments of the service sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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49. LIMITED SEARCH AND THE TECHNOLOGY CHOICES OF MULTINATIONAL FIRMS IN BRAZIL.
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Morley, Samuel A. and Smith, Gordon W.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,LABOR ,WORK environment ,TECHNOLOGY ,ENGINEERING - Abstract
This article discusses a study which investigated whether the failure of multinationals in Brazil to adapt production techniques to labor abundance arises from limited factor substitutability or from a permissive environment. Production planners in the multinationals we studied rationalized their decisions in terms of a limited range of engineering-efficient technologies. This paper investigates whether the failure of multinationals to adapt their production techniques more fully to labor abundance arises from truly limited factor substitutability or from a permissive environment, which allows multinational corporations to produce profitably without searching extensively for technological alternatives.
- Published
- 1977
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50. THE CAIPIRA OF THE PARAITINGA VALLEY, BRAZIL.
- Author
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Marcondes, J. V. Freitas and Smith, T. Lynn
- Subjects
SOCIAL groups ,COMMUNITY life ,SOCIAL participation ,BELIEF & doubt ,COST of living - Abstract
The paper is a brief report of a study of the way of life followed by the caipiras who inhabit the Paraitinga Valley in the eastern part of the state of Sāo Paulo, Brazil. It is limited largely to considerations of the population and its characteristics; health, diet, housing and related aspects of the level and standard of living; labor contracts and work techniques; religious beliefs and practices; social participation; and the rights enjoyed by these humble folk who are similar in so many ways to the bulk of the rural inhabitants of other sections of the Brazilian nation. Most of the description and analysis is based upon a long period of personal observation and study by the Brazilian co-author of the report. For almost two decades the author has been in intimate contact with families in the region studied, making detailed observations and records of various aspects of social organization and social participation. Caipira is a term widely used in Sāo Paulo to designate the humble rural folk who inhabit the less advanced sections of the state. It usually has a depreciative connotation.
- Published
- 1952
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- View/download PDF
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