996 results
Search Results
2. Evolution and characterization of health sciences paper retractions in Brazil and Portugal.
- Author
-
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. The financing of innovation policies in Brazil between 1999 and 2016: political economy, institutions and financial cycles.
- Author
-
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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Do Brazilian researchers in graduate accounting programs publish in English? An exploratory study.
- Author
-
Ferreira, Denize Demarche Minatti, de Oliveira, Monique Cristiane, Borba, José Alonso, and Schappo, Fillipe
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY periodicals ,ENGLISH language ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,ACCOUNTING ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Publishing in academic journals leads to recognition among peers and contributes to northern scientific knowledge. Brazilian universities have encouraged the internationalization of scientific production in English. The English language has come to be considered the lingua of science and increasingly by the Accounting area. This study aims to is to provide English publications overview made by Brazilian Accounting researchers. We collected the papers published in English through the Lattes curricula of 489 accredited professors in the 36 Graduate Programs in Accounting Sciences over a 21-year period. Results show that the publishing of papers in English has increased over the years. However, the focus of these publications has been broad, diversified and of low impact. Typically, there has been a lack of papers by Brazilian researchers in top journals and/or journals which are specifically dedicated to the Accounting area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Agri-food globalization and food security in Brazil: recent trends and contradictions.
- Author
-
Flexor, Georges, Kato, Karina Yoshie, and Leite, Sergio Pereira
- Subjects
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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Like the swing of the pendulum: The history of government-sponsored rural settlements in São Paulo, Brazil (1820s–1920s).
- Author
-
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
7. The role of knowledge management practices in the absorptive capacity: a research of soybean farms.
- Author
-
Silva, Larissa, Rossi, Ricardo, Freitag, Maria Salete, and Grzybovski, Denize
- Abstract
Empirical evidence and systematic reviews suggest the need for studying how organisational antecedents or mechanisms affect absorptive capacity (ACAP). This study intends to fill this theoretical gap by trying to understand the role of technology-oriented knowledge management practices (KMPs) that serve as managerial antecedents in an organisation's ACAP. To achieve this goal, qualitative research was conducted among soybean farmers in the state of Goiás (Brazil). The main result was that KMPs were identified as the link between potential and realised ACAP insofar as they have institutionalised the process of creating an organisational memory. The main contribution of this paper was to show that practices of searching, launching, storing, and systematically reviewing information are KMPs related to the organisation's ACAP. It complements previous papers that associate these constructs. Future research may further explore this relationship in quantitative terms within other contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Popular knowledge as popular power: struggle and strategy of the Emancipa popular education movement in Brazil.
- Author
-
Vasconcelos, Joana Salém, Rosário, Naiara do, Ribeiro, Tatiane, and Cordeiro, Paula Maíra
- Subjects
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
9. Outsourcing through intermunicipal co-operation: Waste collection and treatment services in Brazil.
- Author
-
Silvestre, Hugo Consciência, Marques, Rui Cunha, Dollery, Brian, and Gomes de Sá, Ginésio Justino
- Subjects
WASTE treatment ,COLLECTION agencies ,COOPERATION ,CONTRACTING out ,INVESTIGATION reports - Abstract
Copyright of Public Money & Management is the property of Routledge 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
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Teaching Social Entrepreneurship in Higher Education: Active Pedagogy in a Deweyan Perspective.
- Author
-
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
- View/download PDF
11. Science, technology and innovation in BRICS countries: Introduction to the special issue.
- Author
-
Patra, Swapan Kumar and Muchie, Mammo
- Abstract
The BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) economies have been the subject of many scholarly studies in recent years, as well as featuring in the popular media. This special issue of the African Journal of Science, Technology, Innovation and Development (AJSTID) called for original research contributions in the various aspects of Science Technology and Innovation (STI) studies in the BRICS group of emerging economics. The issue is composed of 11 research papers on different STI topics relevant to the BRICS countries. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Feminist geographies: fight and achievement of a place in the Brazilian scientific production.
- Author
-
Silva, Joseli Maria and Ornat, Marcio Jose
- Subjects
HUMAN geography ,GEOGRAPHY ,FEMINISTS ,GENDER studies ,JOURNAL writing ,ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
This paper examines the development of the field of feminist geographies in Brazil, proposing a reflection upon the different aspects of the policy (personal, institutional and national/international) which are intertwined with the geographical scientific production on gender and sexualities. This research is based on a data survey comprising 17,636 papers published between 1974 and 2015 in 90 scientific journals kept by Brazilian geographical entities at all levels of the ranking established by the government. The study emphasizes that there was an expansion of the gender and sexualities approach after the 2000s, characterized for its production from the peripheral universities, by young researchers and its publication in scientific journals of lower scientific impact, when the formal criteria of evaluation recently set in Brazil are taken into consideration. The gender studies field can be considered consolidated in Brazil, however, the approach of sexualities in the Brazilian geography still requires some work to be finally recognized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. 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
14. Geographies of food beyond food: transfiguring nexus-thinking through encounters with young people in Brazil.
- Author
-
Zara, Cristiana, Coles, Benjamin, Hadfield-Hill, Sophie, Horton, John, and Kraftl, Peter
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,BRAZILIANS ,FOOD security ,SOCIAL services ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Copyright of Social & Cultural Geography is the property of Routledge 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
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Comparing Diffusion Patterns in Affirmative Action Policies for Graduate Education in Brazil.
- Author
-
Venturini, Anna Carolina
- Subjects
AFFIRMATIVE action programs ,GRADUATE education ,PUBLIC universities & colleges ,SEMI-structured interviews ,COLLEGE graduates - Abstract
The paper analyzes how Brazilian public universities and graduate programs used models of admission calls and resolutions from other institutions to formulate affirmative action policies for entry into masters and doctorate courses. The paper compares the diffusion of institutional designs before and after the issuance of Normative Order No. 13/2016 by the Ministry of Education. The research was based on an analysis of admission calls of 2,763 programs, a survey and semi-structured interviews. The data confirmed that graduate programs looked for models from their universities, other programs within the same field of knowledge, and institutions in the same region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The politics of public space at São Paulo's Parque Minhocão.
- Author
-
Williams, Richard J.
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,PUBLIC architecture ,SPACE (Architecture) ,EXPRESS highways ,WORMS - Abstract
São Paulo's Minhocão (Big Worm) is a 3.5 km elevated expressway that cuts across a dense part of the central city. Opened in 1971, it was controversial from the start, and widely held responsible for the decline of the city's historic centre in the 1970s and 1980s. However, it has been gradually tamed over the years, first closed to traffic at night, and then at weekends and on holidays, becoming an impromptu park, the Parque Minhocão, which has had official status since 2014. Those informal closures have been accompanied by numerous architectural schemes over the years to make the Minhocão a permanent park on the lines of New York's High Line. The Parque Minhocão in its present condition represents a stand-off between various interest groups, all of whom have claims on it as public space. The paper explores the history of the Parque Minhocão since 1969 through different forms of visualisation, arguing that its present condition, however imperfect, keeps multiple and contradictory interests in balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Caffeinated aspirations: social mobilities and specialty coffee baristas in Brazil.
- Author
-
Parrish, Sabine
- Abstract
This paper explores the work experiences of specialty coffee baristas in São Paulo, Brazil, considering specifically the role of passion and aspiration. Through ethnographic profiles of four baristas, it reveals how the pursuit of a good life through employment extends beyond immediate economic gain, but that there are complexities in converting forms of capital within the café workplace which are shaped by Brazil’s social context and distinct histories and hierarchies around food service labor. Success and longevity in the position was shaped by baristas’ preexisting capital, and heavily mediated by socioeconomic status; although certain baristas faced more precarious trajectories, they called upon discourses of passion to mitigate challenges inherent in lower-waged food service work. By exploring the experiences and aspirations of baristas in Brazil, this paper sheds light on the complex dynamics of social mobility and labor in emerging connoisseur and artisan markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Making soil in the Plantationocene.
- Author
-
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
19. Citizenship and settler colonialism in Brazil: The toré ritual as a decolonial indigenous practice in the Northeast Region.
- Author
-
Poets, Desiree
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,IMPERIALISM ,DECOLONIZATION ,INDIGENOUS rights ,EVICTION - Abstract
This article argues that settler colonialism structures Indigenous rights in Brazil and shows how Indigenous peoples have also engaged Indigenous rights to interrupt settler colonialism. To this end, it turns to the 20
th century (re-)emergence of officially extinct Indigenous peoples in Brazil's Northeast Region and the central role of the toré ritual in this process. While the toré reversed the settler colonial logic of Indigenous elimination and dispossession, the Indigenous (re-)emergences also operated within the possibilities of settler policy. Lingering in the tense gap between citizenship's limits and possibilities under settler colonialism, the article argues that the toré, by mobilizing bodies, land, culture, and memory, underscores the performative aspect of citizenship and the role of embodied practices in decolonization. Stressing the imbrication of the performative, the material, and the political, the paper offers a Brazilian perspective on debates on Indigenous refusal and the politics of recognition, challenging their simplistic dichotomization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Integrating water charges policies and watershed plans for improved investment and financial sustainability in water resources management.
- Author
-
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
21. Venture capital industry emergence and development in India and Brazil: the role of the state and challenges for the Global South countries.
- Author
-
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
22. The philosophy of sport in Brazil: in search of the construction of a field of research.
- Author
-
Moraes e Silva, Marcelo and Amgarten Quitzau, Evelise
- Subjects
- *
SPORTS , *ATHLETIC fields , *SCHOLARLY method , *PHYSICAL education - Abstract
The field of Philosophy of Sport has been developing in Anglo-Saxon scholarship since the 1960s and since then has achieved considerable consolidation. However, this is a progressing field in Latin American countries like Brazil. This paper aims to analyse the trajectory of the Philosophy of Sport in Brazil, presenting an overview of its development since the 1980s and some prospects that have been generated since the turn of the century. In conclusion, the article points out that the field of Philosophy of Sport in Brazil is in the process of disciplinary consolidation, presenting a plurality of agents, institutions and theoretical approaches in its structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Narratives and Public Policies: The Case of the Brazilian Development Bank.
- Author
-
Cavalcante, Luiz Ricardo
- Subjects
DEVELOPMENT banks ,GOVERNMENT policy ,BANK loans ,INTEREST rates ,LAW reform - Abstract
Over the last decades, the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) has been the main source of long-term credit for investments in Brazil. However, from the mid-2010s onward, the fiscal costs of the subsidized credits provided by the bank have been increasingly stressed, configuring a second narrative of its role in the Brazilian economy. Based upon a review of the most frequently cited and most relevant academic articles about the BNDES published between 2005 and 2019, this paper analyzes these competing narratives and their impact on the public policies adopted to foster investments in the country. In a context marked by lower market interest rates and by an increasing capacity of large companies to obtain long-term credit from non-governmental sources, the second narrative prevailed over the last years and led to a law reform in 2017 to reduce the subsidies provided by the bank. The paper empirically demonstrates a narrative shift that influenced public policies regarding development banking and shows how changing settings affect the interest groups' capacity to disseminate their narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. 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
25. The Multiple Roles of Socio-Anthropological Expert Evidence in Indigenous Land Claims: The Xukuru People Case.
- Author
-
Monteiro de Matos, Mariana
- Subjects
FORENSIC anthropology ,ETHNOLOGY ,SOCIAL interaction ,EXPERT evidence - Abstract
In 2018, the Inter-American Court delivered the first – and so far, only – judgment against Brazil on Indigenous land rights. This leading decision upheld the state's failure to comply with human rights obligations due to the non-removal of non-Indigenous individuals from the territory of the Xukuru people. Such an issue, namely, insecure land tenure affects Indigenous peoples worldwide. The decision's outcome consolidated a critical trend in international law concerning the concept of Indigenous lands: a place where Indigenous peoples have their residence and holistically develop their life, which states must actively protect, according to Article 21 of the American Convention read in conjunction with Article 1.1 and 2 thereof. By analyzing secondary sources (inter alia, ethnographies and court documents), this paper addresses the role of social (or cultural) anthropology regarding expert evidence in the Xukuru land claims. It articulates the Brazilian and Inter-American legal framework on expert evidence and Indigenous land rights with the literature on 'anthropological expertise' and 'cultural expertise', which includes the branches of forensic social anthropology and expert social anthropology. This analysis underscores the evolving challenges concerning expert evidence in legal-administrative procedures on the national and international levels. It argues that cultural anthropologists acting as experts on these levels need different sets of skills, which should be developed through special training. Thus, this paper amplifies the interdisciplinary dialogue between law and social anthropology on the topical issue of human rights adjudication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Managing Brazil's participation in the 1970 football World Cup: meaning in the service of power.
- Author
-
Oliveira, Lídia, Caria, Ana, Oliveira, Helena Costa, and Almeida, Janaína
- Abstract
This paper focuses on the management of Brazilian participation in the 1970 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. It analyzes discourses in the press to critically discuss how power relations were combined in the construction of a consensus around the participation in the 1970 Cup, drawing on concepts of symbolic forms, power and ideology. This cup motivated a series of dramatizations of the social world, revealing relationships, values and ideologies in force and latent. Strategies of symbolic construction made use of football (as a symbol of unity, identity and collective identification) and of traditional management tools such as accounting and calculative practices to rationalize discourses and legitimate power relations. Through a holistic approach, the study contributes to understand the use of football by dominant groups in shaping society. In the economic and financial dimension, the paper also provides insights into the constitutive role of accounting by showing its contribution to establish and sustain relations of domination, and into its interlinkages with a broader popular phenomenon – football. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Planning systems and cultures in global comparison. The case of Brazil and Germany.
- Author
-
Zimmermann, Karsten and Momm, Sandra
- Subjects
WORLD culture ,CROSS-cultural studies ,EUROPEAN communities ,DEVELOPING countries ,COMPARATIVE method - Abstract
The global comparison of planning systems faces several theoretical and normative challenges. Against the background of ongoing debates on the comparability of emerging and existing ideas and practices of planning in the Global North and South, we propose a comparative approach based on field theory. Comparisons of planning systems often focus on the institutional dimension or are mere juxtapositions of cases studies. A comparison based on field theory is more appropriate for the comparative study of planning cultures as the approach allows to interpret planning as an emerging practice influenced (or not) by globalized or European knowledge communities. The two planning systems under scrutiny in this paper are Germany and Brazil. Germany presents a mature field of planning while Brazil's field of planning is emergent. The paper is based on a literature review that supports the formulation of assumptions and tests the approach through a comparison of Brazil and Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Neoliberal representations of Muslims and the Islamic world: a discourse analysis of imaginative geographies in Brazilian local and regional print media.
- Author
-
de Araújo, Shadia Husseini
- Subjects
MUSLIMS ,MASS media ,DISCOURSE ,ADULTS ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Since 9/11, representations of Muslims and the Islamic world in Western mass media have received much scholarly attention, not least because such representations influence how Muslims are perceived by and integrated into Western societies. Most existing studies have shown that Muslims and Islam tend to be framed negatively through orientalist and Islamophobic discourses. However, this paper argues that in specific contexts, neoliberal ideology has generated mass-media representations of Muslims and the Islamic world that differ from orientalist versions. In contexts relating to the globalised halal market, for example, neoliberal discourses portray Muslims and the Islamic world as economically useful and/or exploitable rather than culturally threatening. This argument is supported by an analysis of representations of Muslims and the Islamic world in local and regional newspapers in Brazil, one of the largest halal meat and poultry exporters in the world. Drawing on theories of neoliberalism, a discourse theoretical approach and the notion of imaginative geographies, the study examines newspaper articles on the halal business. Based on the findings, this paper suggests that scholars should subject neoliberal ideology (and its interaction with orientalism and Islamophobia) to greater scrutiny in future research on representations of Muslims and the Islamic world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. 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
30. Language, communication, and the COVID-19 pandemic: criticality of multi-lingual education.
- Author
-
Sengupta, Papia
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,MULTILINGUAL education ,ENDANGERED languages ,CRITICAL analysis ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS - Abstract
This paper aims at identifying and explaining the correlation between the Covid-19 and multi-lingualism through cross-country research, drawing on three datasets: WHO data on the expanse of the pandemic, UNESCO data on endangered languages, and the LDI (Linguistic Diversity Index). Results establishing a direct correlation between the pandemic and multi-lingualism vary across the countries, except the USA, India, and Brazil. The three countries experiencing the highest global pandemic caseload occupy the top positions in the number of endangered languages and are among the top ten linguistically diverse countries. Drawing from the research findings, the paper addresses the criticality of investing in multi-lingualism and calls for a shift of perspective among policymakers driven by neoliberal rationale towards greater recognition and higher funding for multi-lingual education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Trust, traditions and indigenous women’s leadership in sustainable tourism management.
- Author
-
Silva Dos Santos, Cristóvão, Lugosi, Peter, and Hawkins, Rebecca
- Abstract
AbstractThis paper examines contextual dynamics shaping the development of trust in the management of indigenous tourism. It focuses in particular on the role of women’s leadership in fostering community autonomy and a sense of community, which is argued to be key to building trusting relations essential to sustaining the tourism enterprise. Based on empirical fieldwork with the Pataxó Jaqueira community of Porto Seguro, Brazil involving document analysis, participant observation and interviews, the paper shows how trust, tradition and culturally embedded indigenous leadership capacities interact when seeking to develop and deliver tourism that meets community needs. The data show how investing in cultural resources builds social capital and reinforces the credibility women’s leadership, which is then leveraged to challenge patriarchal gender norms. Moreover, it identifies mechanisms of trust development and maintenance between entrepreneurial indigenous women and other community stakeholders, stressing the impacts of the women’s capacity for openness, solidarity and risk taking. The article thus provides contextualised and historically-informed, socio-cultural insights regarding the intersections of gender, trust and traditions in shaping sustainable indigenous tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Lean manufacturing in Brazilian small and medium enterprises: implementation and effect on performance.
- Author
-
Godinho Filho, Moacir, Ganga, Gilberto Miller Devós, and Gunasekaran, Angappa
- Subjects
MANUFACTURED products ,LEAN management ,PERFORMANCE standards ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to investigate the degree to which lean manufacturing (LM) practices are being implemented within Brazilian small and medium enterprises (SMEs), by defining what LM means, in the view of SMEs in Brazil. In addition, the paper investigates the relationship between LM implementation and performance of such companies. The research method used in this paper comprised of an exploratory survey using the partial least-square method with the structural equation modelling technique (PLS-SEM). The results show that the companies studied used practices in a fragmented manner, without a holistic view of LM, which is considered to be one of the most important parts of this approach. Only the constructs of statistical process control, total productive maintenance and employee involvement are being implemented as an integrated approach for Brazilian SMEs. These companies do not take other important constructs such as customer involvement, continuous flow, pull production, set-up time reduction, supplier development and supplier feedback into consideration as part of LM systems, despite using some practices in a dispersed manner. Concerning performance, the present study shows that even in a fragmented way, the implementation of these LM practices help these companies to achieve improvement in operational performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Are Governance Modes Alike? An Analysis Based on Bureaucratic Relationships and Skills.
- Author
-
Cavalcante, Pedro and Lotta, Gabriela
- Subjects
BUREAUCRACY ,CIVIL service ,SECURITY sector ,STATE governments ,PRIVATE sector ,CITIZENSHIP - Abstract
This paper explores how diverse governance modes can be and how they require different bureaucratic capabilities. We test two main hypotheses: different policy sectors require particular governance modes, and different governance modes operate with distinct bureaucratic skills. The inquiry uses a survey applied to over three thousand civil servants of the Brazilian government that covered these two dimensions of the bureaucracy's performance: relationships and skills. The paper's findings confirmed both hypotheses. The analysis showed that infrastructure and productive development sectors relate more with the private sector; security and citizenship with state governments; and social/environmental sectors with municipalities in a decentralized context. Regarding bureaucratic skills, they vary according to the governance modes, highlighting the core of government as the most qualified sector. In conclusion, the analysis highlights that particular institutional arrangement, policy nature, and sector dynamics must be taken for granted to understand how modes of governance are built and operated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. THE BRAZILIAN SCENE: DAVID LOWENTHAL, JOHN DOS PASSOS, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF "SCENE" AND BRAZIL TO GEOGRAPHIC INQUIRY.
- Author
-
Brandt, Samuel T.
- Subjects
NATURAL resources ,LAND resource ,STEREOTYPES ,GEOGRAPHERS ,TRAVEL writing - Abstract
This paper applies David Lowenthal's 1968 Geographical Review article "The American Scene" and John Dos Passos' 1963 travelogue Brazil on the Move to develop a notion of the Brazilian scene. It argues for the importance of "scene" as a concept in geographic inquiry and the relevance of Brazil to concerns across the discipline. Scene matters to geographers because it provides immense pedagogical value in explaining the character and most important features of a place. As a demographic and socioeconomic "microcosm of the world," Brazil is fertile ground for constructing a theory of scene. Three interrelated concepts are integral to the Brazilian scene: ufanismo (pride in abundance of land and natural resources), a belief in the promise of the future, and movement inward from the Atlantic. A close reading of Brazil on the Move advances the concept of scene beyond the "long succession of idealized images and visual stereotypes" posed by Lowenthal, and toward including visions that better account for issues of contemporary interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Brazil in MINUSTAH: exporting a domestic understanding of civil-military relations to a UN peace operation.
- Author
-
de Carvalho, Vinicius Mariano and Bascaule, Charlotte
- Subjects
CIVIL-military relations ,UNITED Nations peacekeeping forces ,SHORT selling (Securities) ,PEACEBUILDING ,MILITARY relations ,PEACE - Abstract
Brazil led the military contingent of MINUSTAH during the 13 years of the mission and was also the largest contributor with troops for this mission. This paper argues that what has been described as the 'Brazilian way' of civil-military relations in that peacekeeping mission is illustrative of the Brazilian association between notions of security and development at home. The mandate for MINUSTAH is actually representative of Brazilian efforts to promote new paradigms in UN peacekeeping operations going beyond short missions in order to address the roots of the target country's issues and ensure long-term progress. Nevertheless, if such discourse does hold merit in terms of the deeper approach to peacekeeping it encourages, this approach involves military actors beyond the security realm, into development activities, as visible during MINUSTAH. This paper describes the implications of uncoordinated military-led humanitarian initiatives and demonstrates that this security-development nexus, as it exists currently in Brazil and in the way it is exported by Brazil into peacekeeping operations like MINUSTAH, jeopardises the country's capacity to build sustainable civilian institutions and mechanisms for longer-term recovery and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Populism, extractivism, and the social transformation of Brazil.
- Author
-
Veltmeyer, Henry
- Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Development Studies is the property of Routledge 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
37. A Chemical Approach to the Selection of Soils for the Reproduction of Earth-based Mortars for Conservation Purposes: Case Report from a Brazilian Historic Site.
- Author
-
Cavicchioli, Andrea, Rolón, Guillermo, and Odlyha, Marianne
- Subjects
HISTORIC sites ,MORTAR ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,HISTORIC buildings ,SOILS ,PRESERVATION of architecture - Abstract
Earthen buildings frequently demand the use of protective renders and plasters that should be, in several aspects, compatible with the underlying structures. To this end, earth-based mortars have traditionally been used and are common in historic houses. Their periodic replacement or repair is inevitable and intrinsic with their naturally sacrificial role, but restorations are also expected to follow suitability criteria, as well as minimum performance standards. In this paper, an approach to the reproduction of wall-finishes close to the original formulations found on historic buildings is proposed and described using the case study of a historic site in Brazil. The problem was addressed using the elemental composition data of a set of original mortars and a bank of local soils that were treated by multivariate statistical analysis. The final restoration mortars, that were obtained also by adjusting their granulometric profile by means of the mixture of sand, exhibited satisfactory performance in terms of adhesive strength and water absorption, as well as of resistance to water erosion when stabilized with lime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Governance of the commons and social values: a dialogue between Elinor Ostrom's work and the francophone theory of reciprocity.
- Author
-
Sabourin, Eric
- Subjects
SOCIAL values ,RECIPROCITY (Psychology) ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ECONOMIC anthropology ,COMMONS ,RESOURCE management - Abstract
This paper analyses the importance of reciprocity in the processes and procedures recorded in the management of common resources. First, it examines the role that Elinor Ostrom attributes to the norm of reciprocity in her approach to common property resources. Second, it interprets economic and social relationships in the management of common resources as seen by Francophone economic anthropology's theory of reciprocity. The argument relies on the application of these two theoretical and methodological approaches to the analysis of common resources management systems in the Northeast of Brazil and in New Caledonia. The conclusion attempts to establish a dialogue between Ostrom's proposals and the theory of reciprocity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Brazil and China going global: emerging issues and questions to explore knowledge and policy transfers.
- Author
-
Romano, Giulia C. and Porto de Oliveira, Osmany
- Subjects
KNOWLEDGE transfer ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
Most research in policy transfer studies focused on cases of policies originating from the 'Global North'. However, recently countries of the 'Global South' became sources of models. With the exception of a few studies, literature has not considered these developments. This paper aims at contributing to this direction, by proposing an agenda drawn from policy transfer studies as well as from the observation of Brazil's and China's engagement in policy transfer. This exercise helps highlight a series of aspects overlooked by the literature. Understanding their motivations, their timing and other important aspects related to these processes can shed new light on policy transfer phenomena. New research questions are introduced and illustrated by examples from Brazil and China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Organizational Culture and Strategic Management in Brazilian Public Organizations: Systematization of Factors to Improve School Management.
- Author
-
de Oliveira, Pedro Henrique, Santos, Fernando César Almada, Catussi Paschoalotto, Marco Antonio, Nagano, Marcelo Seido, Hashimoto, Elizabeth Mie, and Robertson, Peter J.
- Subjects
SCHOOL administration ,STRATEGIC planning ,PUBLIC administration ,CORPORATE culture ,POLITICAL participation ,FACTOR analysis ,COMMUNITY involvement - Abstract
Drawing upon influencing factors in public organizations' performance, this paper systematizes organizational culture and strategic management factors to improve school management. The team conducted a survey with 407 principals from public schools in Brazil, along with a factorial analysis to explore the cultural and strategic management factors. The results show two factors influencing school management, technical and political. More specifically, six factors influence the process, such as planning, participation, citizen formation, innovative practices, pedagogical practices, and community participation. The conclusion points out factors and establishes elements to provide a guide for public organizations toward improved management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Understanding consumption frequency across consumer segments and regions in the Brazilian aquaculture market.
- Author
-
St. Louis, Tracy Jeanel, Pedroza Filho, Manoel Xavier, and Flores, Roberto Manolio Valladao
- Subjects
LOW-income consumers ,CONSUMERS ,AQUACULTURE ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,OXYGEN consumption - Abstract
Several socio-demographic factors influence fish consumption frequency and preferences in the Brazilian aquaculture market. Hence, the aims of this paper were (i) to acquire information on fish consumption frequency; (ii) to examine the associations between specific socio-demographic characteristics of aquaculture consumers; (iii) to investigate the consumption frequency of these specific characteristics relating to certain barriers and drivers of consumption frequency; and (iv) to explore whether consumption behavior varies across different groups of consumers and regions. The study involved an online survey of 1509 consumers across the five regions in Brazil. The results of this study indicated that the general fish consumption frequency pattern is highly seasonal. In addition, we determined that significant differences in fish consumption frequency, determinants, and habits were found among income levels, age groups and regions. Our results show that low-income consumers are highly disadvantaged and more likely to consume fish less frequently than the other income groups. We further recommend several marketing strategies and initiatives to stimulate the consumption frequency of fish amongst Brazilian consumers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The politics of police violence: Political competition and police killings in Brazil.
- Author
-
Flom, Hernán
- Subjects
POLICE brutality ,DEMOCRACY ,POLICE shootings ,POLICE reform ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
What affects police killings of denizens in the cities of developing democracies? Brazil is one of the countries with the most casualties from police lethality, yet deaths from police interventions vary greatly across its cities, as well as over time. Since most of its police forces are formally responsive to state-level governments, the political dynamics at this government tier are essential to comprehend urban policing—and its resort to deadly violence. I argue that subnational political competition explains whether state-level governments can implement reforms to reduce police lethality. I illustrate this argument through a within-case, cross-case comparison of the city-states of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro since re-democratization in the 1980s. While lower fragmentation and partisan continuity at the state-level government enabled and consolidated reforms that mitigated police violence in São Paulo, higher fragmentation and turnover inhibited reforms and increased police lethality in Rio. Building on interviews with subnational politicians and police officers as well as statistics on police killings, this paper helps spark an urgent conversation in urban studies on police violence in the urban Global South and expands the police reform literature by developing a theory of how politics influences police violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Migrants’ entangled socio-political and biological lives during the COVID-19 emergency in Brazil.
- Author
-
de Castro, Flávia Rodrigues, Zapata, Gisela P., and Vera Espinoza, Marcia
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *CIVIL society , *ASSISTANCE in emergencies , *IMMIGRANTS , *LIVING conditions - Abstract
AbstractFor 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
44. Lula, the people’s guy: populism, liberal democracy and voting in Brazil.
- Author
-
Mandache, Luminiţa-Anda
- Subjects
- *
POWER (Social sciences) , *POLITICAL culture , *POLITICAL campaigns , *POLITICIANS , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
AbstractDrawing 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
45. The iatrogenesis of obstetric racism in Brazil: beyond the body, beyond the clinic.
- Author
-
Williamson, K. Eliza
- Subjects
MATERNAL health services ,RACISM ,HEALTH policy ,CHILDBIRTH ,FEMINISM - Abstract
In Brazil, Black women are disproportionately denied access to timely care and are made vulnerable to death by avoidable obstetric causes. However, they have not been at the center of recent initiatives to improve maternal health. This paper contends that the effectiveness of Brazilian maternal and infant health policy is limited by failures to robustly address racial health inequities. Multi-sited ethnographic research on the implementation of the Rede Cegonha program in Bahia, Brazil between 2012 and 2017 reveals how anti-Blackness structures iatrogenic harms for Black women as well as their kin in maternal healthcare. Building on the work of Black Brazilian feminists, the paper shows how Afro-Brazilian women experience anti-Black racism in obstetric care, which the paper argues can be better understood through Dána-Ain Davis' concept of obstetric racism. The paper suggests that such forms of violence reveal the necropolitical facets of reproductive governance and that the framing of obstetric violence broadens the scales and temporalities of iatrogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. [Im]Mobility and trucking disruption: what happened to isolated cities and individuals in Brazil after a supply blockage.
- Author
-
Mello, Sérgio Carvalho Benício de, Bastos, Antonio Fagner de Silva, and Mello, Gabriel Benício de
- Subjects
TRUCKS ,MUNICIPAL services ,URBAN studies ,TRUCKING ,TRUCK drivers ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
In May 2018, truckers paralysed Brazil producing a series of disruptions causing unprecedented immobility. The event was a logistical disaster, exposing major failures in commodity supply systems and causing monumental economic losses, cancellations of basic services, and the disruption of public services. In this paper, we approach this phenomenon by means of an urban study using the new mobilities paradigm and a dialectical character of social and spatial relations to help us understand what was going on. To accomplish this, we have performed content analysis of the virtual media during the trucking disruption and the 90 days that followed it. Our findings indicate that a paralysed society becomes disoriented and even aggressive when order, routine, and everyday life are disturbed. The paper concludes with notes about the consequences of immobility in daily life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Precarization or Protection? The Role of Trade and Labour Policies on Informality.
- Author
-
Almeida, Rita K., Paz, Lourenço S., and Poole, Jennifer P.
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL policy ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,LABOR mobility ,KNOWLEDGE workers ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Several episodes of market-oriented reforms in developing countries have been accompanied by a significant rise in work outside of the formal economy. This paper investigates whether the impact of trade on formal employment is mediated by the strength of labour regulations. We rely on data from the Brazilian Census that provides information on workers' demographics and employment, including job formality status. Our estimation strategy exploits quasi-exogenous changes in industry-level real exchange rates to explore the likelihood of informality across employers exposed to varying degrees of de facto labour regulations. We further utilize two key features of Brazilian labour institutions – budgetary decisions about the availability of resources occur at the federal level, while decisions about where to inspect occur at the local level – to instrument for labour enforcement. Our results suggest that strict labour regulations may lead to a precarization of employment, rather than offering protection for workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Lobbying regulation in India and Brazil: comparative pluralistic and elite perspectives.
- Author
-
Pereira, Alexandre and Nakray, Keerty
- Subjects
LOBBYING laws ,LOBBYING ,POLITICS & government of India, 1977- ,CORRUPTION - Abstract
This paper compares the evolution of the debates around lobbying regulation in India and Brazil. Studies on lobbying regulation have compared the results of regulatory frameworks implementation, but little work exists in countries where these practices are unregulated. Findings from this paper show that the debates in Brazil have evolved due to the pressure for the institutionalisation of the government affairs sector; while in India, the debates still remain fragmented with lack of cohesion amongst interest groups, since lobbying is associated with corruption. These findings have implications for Commonwealth countries since, in the majority of countries, lobbying is still unregulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Institutions and Development From a Historical Perspective: the Case of the Brazilian Development Bank.
- Author
-
Palludeto, Alex Wilhans Antonio and Borghi, Roberto Alexandre Zanchetta
- Subjects
DEVELOPMENT banks ,POLITICAL change - Abstract
This paper analyzes the role played by the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) in different periods of Brazil's development process since its founding in 1952. The bank's history is nonlinear, varying with socio-economic and political changes over time. Four major periods in its history are: (i) from its creation to the debt crisis in the 1980s, a period known as 'developmentalism'; (ii) the neoliberal movement of the 1990s; (iii) the reintroduction of the BNDES as a relevant tool for development in the 2000s; and (iv) a new neoliberal movement that arose beginning in mid-2016. Each of these periods is characterized by certain development conventions that shape how institutions, such as the BNDES, operate, and at the same time are shaped by them. In contrast to mainstream economics, which focuses on a one-size-fits-all institution for development, this paper evaluates the interactions between development and institutions as historical processes, with an emphasis on the prevailing development conventions. The trajectory and different roles assumed by the BNDES over time exemplify this permanent relationship, rejecting the idea that particular types of institutions are related to development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The paleoichnofauna in bones of Brazilian Quaternary cave deposits and the proposition of two new ichnotaxa.
- Author
-
Trifilio, Lucas Henrique Medeiros da Silva, de Araújo Júnior, Hermínio Ismael, and Porpino, Kleberson de Oliveira
- Subjects
TRACE fossils ,FOSSIL bones ,ICHNOLOGY ,CAVES ,PALEONTOLOGY ,TERMITES ,COBRAS - Abstract
The Quaternary vertebrate paleontology of the Brazilian Intertropical Region is well-known, but there are only a few publications on bone ichnology. In this paper, we analyzed trace fossils in 23 bones of the Gruna das Três Cobras, Complexo Suíço, and F3 caves, which are located in Bahia and Rio Grande do Norte states, in the Brazilian Intertropical Region. We discovered gnaw marks assigned to Machichnus and bite marks attributed to Nihilichnus, as well as insect modifications referring to single (Cuniculichnus, Gunnellichnus, Karethraichnus, and Osteocallis) and multiple behaviors (Munitusichnus, and Taotieichnus). Additionally, we proposed the new ichnospecies Nihilichnus sulcatus n. isp. (bite mark) and Cuniculichnus cascudoi n. isp. (insect feeding mark). Regarding the predation/scavenger marks, Protocyon troglodytes was the probable primary modification agent, but some traces may also be attributed to Smilodon populator and Caiman latirostris. Cuniculichnus, Karethraichnus, Munitusichnus, and Osteocallis are attributed to dermestids, whereas termites probably produced Gunnelichnus and Taotieichnus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.