
Federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro – dust under the carpet?
By PAULO CAPEL NARVAI: The main problem with federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro is that they are still federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro
By PAULO CAPEL NARVAI: The main problem with federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro is that they are still federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro
By RICARDO IANNACE: Start with the short stories, continue with the chronicles, then reach the novels. Or reverse everything
By PAULO NOGUEIRA BATISTA JR.: The European Commission continues to fight for a neoliberal and neocolonial type agreement with Mercosur
By MÁRIO MAESTRI: The thesis of Brazil's feudal character was born from the forced superstructural overlapping of characteristics of European feudalism to the Portuguese-Brazilian colonial world
By MARTIN MAGNUS PETIZ: The history of the English labor movement is food for thought about the current union movement here, in Brazil
By FERNANDO J. PIRES DE SOUSA: The advance of the ultra-right in the world, alongside the resistance of the left in some countries, is evidence that the social gap between inclusion versus exclusion intensifies political and social conflict
By PAULO CAPEL NARVAI: The main problem with federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro is that they are still federal hospitals in Rio de Janeiro
By RICARDO IANNACE: Start with the short stories, continue with the chronicles, then reach the novels. Or reverse everything
By PAULO NOGUEIRA BATISTA JR.: The European Commission continues to fight for a neoliberal and neocolonial type agreement with Mercosur
By MÁRIO MAESTRI: The thesis of Brazil's feudal character was born from the forced superstructural overlapping of characteristics of European feudalism to the Portuguese-Brazilian colonial world
By MARTIN MAGNUS PETIZ: The history of the English labor movement is food for thought about the current union movement here, in Brazil
By FERNANDO J. PIRES DE SOUSA: The advance of the ultra-right in the world, alongside the resistance of the left in some countries, is evidence that the social gap between inclusion versus exclusion intensifies political and social conflict