
Brazil and Mexico
By MARCUS IANONI: What do Morena, AMLO and Claudia Scheinbaum have that we can't have too?
By MARCUS IANONI: What do Morena, AMLO and Claudia Scheinbaum have that we can't have too?
By LINA CHAMIE: Commentary on the film directed by Eduardo Escorel
By SERGIO BRAGA: Brief tribute to the professor of sociology and political science at Unicamp
By ANDRÉ RICARDO DIAS: Oligarchy, patrimonialism, bossism, clientelism or physiologism, all the key concepts for a political science about Brazil fit into the history of the Coelho family in Petrolina (PE)
By VINÍCIUS DUTRA: Commentary on two recently translated books by Jacques Lacan: “Early Writings” and “The Logic of the Phantasm. Seminar 14”
By WALNICE NOGUEIRA GALVÃO: And all this time people were asking themselves: “What about the Marseillaise? What about the Marseillaise?” As expected, it was enthusiastically played and sung in the outer atrium of the church, closing the festivities.
By ANTONIO BARSCH GIMENEZ & THIAGO FELICIANO LOPES: Even with the increase in productivity over almost two centuries, nothing has been done to shorten the working day
By ANDREA HARADA: What will become of the teacher in the new regulatory framework for distance learning: a hidden, undefined or non-existent subject?
By WILLIAM GRANDI: Academic malaise and the attempt to reduce research in economic history
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Anyone who is aware of foreign, institutional and family control of the Brazilian stock market avoids minority participation as an individual shareholder.
By HUGO ALMEIDA: Commentary on the recently released book by Ronaldo Costa Fernandes
By LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: Democracy needs to be radicalized, with a more ambitious commitment to social justice
By GILBERTO MARINGONI: The new reality does not fit into the structures imposed by the hegemonic power for eight decades
By RICARDO NORMANHA: The ban on repeating school meals is a reflection of a logic that increasingly aims to streamline public education, treating it as a standardized service that can be outsourced and commercialized.
By PEDRO HENRIQUE M. ANICETO: By combating the 6x1 scale, we are not only providing better living conditions for workers, but also laying the foundations for a stronger and fairer economy.
By VALÉRIA OF THE SANTOS GUIMARÃES: Foreword to the recently released book by Ana Paula Neves Oliveira
By MARCUS IANONI: What do Morena, AMLO and Claudia Scheinbaum have that we can't have too?
By LINA CHAMIE: Commentary on the film directed by Eduardo Escorel
By SERGIO BRAGA: Brief tribute to the professor of sociology and political science at Unicamp
By ANDRÉ RICARDO DIAS: Oligarchy, patrimonialism, bossism, clientelism or physiologism, all the key concepts for a political science about Brazil fit into the history of the Coelho family in Petrolina (PE)
By VINÍCIUS DUTRA: Commentary on two recently translated books by Jacques Lacan: “Early Writings” and “The Logic of the Phantasm. Seminar 14”
By WALNICE NOGUEIRA GALVÃO: And all this time people were asking themselves: “What about the Marseillaise? What about the Marseillaise?” As expected, it was enthusiastically played and sung in the outer atrium of the church, closing the festivities.
By ANTONIO BARSCH GIMENEZ & THIAGO FELICIANO LOPES: Even with the increase in productivity over almost two centuries, nothing has been done to shorten the working day
By ANDREA HARADA: What will become of the teacher in the new regulatory framework for distance learning: a hidden, undefined or non-existent subject?
By WILLIAM GRANDI: Academic malaise and the attempt to reduce research in economic history
By FERNANDO NOGUEIRA DA COSTA: Anyone who is aware of foreign, institutional and family control of the Brazilian stock market avoids minority participation as an individual shareholder.
By HUGO ALMEIDA: Commentary on the recently released book by Ronaldo Costa Fernandes
By LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: Democracy needs to be radicalized, with a more ambitious commitment to social justice
By GILBERTO MARINGONI: The new reality does not fit into the structures imposed by the hegemonic power for eight decades
By RICARDO NORMANHA: The ban on repeating school meals is a reflection of a logic that increasingly aims to streamline public education, treating it as a standardized service that can be outsourced and commercialized.
By PEDRO HENRIQUE M. ANICETO: By combating the 6x1 scale, we are not only providing better living conditions for workers, but also laying the foundations for a stronger and fairer economy.
By VALÉRIA OF THE SANTOS GUIMARÃES: Foreword to the recently released book by Ana Paula Neves Oliveira