
State-owned company in Brazil
By JOSÉ RAIMUNDO TRINDADE: Imperialism and state-owned enterprises in Brazilian dependent capitalism
By JOSÉ RAIMUNDO TRINDADE: Imperialism and state-owned enterprises in Brazilian dependent capitalism
By ERIVELTO DA ROCHA CARVALHO: Considerations regarding Vladimir Nabokov's book on Miguel de Cervantes
By TARSO GENRO: Uruguay is a small bright spot before Antarctica. With its back to the squalor of Milei and facing the Rio Grande, it shines as a counterpoint to Hitler's orange ghost in the direction of the north of the country.
By RENATO ORTIZ: Gabriel García Márquez is a master of this subtle and delicate craft in guiding the reader to the flavor of the undulation of the sentences, he holds the cystolic art of guiding us through the lines of the text
By EDUARDO VASCO: If in Europe and Asia Donald Trump's foreign policy could result in the weakening of American interventionism, the scenario in Latin America will probably not follow this trend
By ANISIO PIRES: The quantity and “quality” of things said about Venezuela always surprises. Often without knowing what to say, we are either outraged or laugh out loud at the absurd stories that are believed.
By JOSÉ RAIMUNDO TRINDADE: Imperialism and state-owned enterprises in Brazilian dependent capitalism
By ERIVELTO DA ROCHA CARVALHO: Considerations regarding Vladimir Nabokov's book on Miguel de Cervantes
By TARSO GENRO: Uruguay is a small bright spot before Antarctica. With its back to the squalor of Milei and facing the Rio Grande, it shines as a counterpoint to Hitler's orange ghost in the direction of the north of the country.
By RENATO ORTIZ: Gabriel García Márquez is a master of this subtle and delicate craft in guiding the reader to the flavor of the undulation of the sentences, he holds the cystolic art of guiding us through the lines of the text
By EDUARDO VASCO: If in Europe and Asia Donald Trump's foreign policy could result in the weakening of American interventionism, the scenario in Latin America will probably not follow this trend
By ANISIO PIRES: The quantity and “quality” of things said about Venezuela always surprises. Often without knowing what to say, we are either outraged or laugh out loud at the absurd stories that are believed.