
The political form of capital
By JOSÉ RAIMUNDO TRINDADE: Considerations on the materialist theory of the State
By JOSÉ RAIMUNDO TRINDADE: Considerations on the materialist theory of the State
By DIEGO VIANA: Electorally, fascism has never been so strong. In the USA, Brazil and India, all highly populated countries, it obtained votes of over 45%, surpassing the maximum of 37% of the Nazis in Germany in 1932.
By GIOVANNI MESQUITA: Herman Melville's novel “Moby Dick” and the true story of the sperm whale that sank the ship Essex
By MARIA RAMOS & EDERGENIO NEGREIROS VIEIRA: We are experiencing a real crisis in public safety, which mainly affects the most vulnerable, in addition to deteriorating the so-called Democratic Rule of Law itself.
By EUGENIO BUCCI: A philosopher once said that hell is other people. Nothing to object to. But for Donald Trump, other people's hell is heaven.
By MÁRIO MAESTRI: Donald Trump's current initiative has as its central objective a distancing, still relative, of Russia from the People's Republic of China, in favor of the USA, in a reversal of the pact of the early 1970s, between Mao
By IVONALDO NERES LEITE: The present time is not a receptacle for a single, homogeneous narrative for the Jewish question. It is not a void of discrepancies regarding political instrumentalization
By AMELIA COHN: Nísia Trindade's departure would mean that, no matter how strong her replacement is, health has entered the market for political (and economic) negotiations
By CATHERINE L. BENAMOU: Excerpt from the recently published book
By BRANKO MILANOVIC: The wild four-week ride, which still doesn't seem to have run out of steam, confirms the idea that the new Donald Trump will govern very differently from the old one
By PAULO NOGUEIRA BATISTA JR.: President Lula runs a serious risk of losing in 2026 and confirming the ill-fated Orloff effect, if he appears in 2026 with a third-way face
By MOU HONGJIN: To successfully host COP30, the country will also need to make progress in reducing its own emissions and offering support to other developing countries.
By LUIZ CARLOS BRESSER-PEREIRA: Academics talk about nationalism, but they refer to their own nationalism, its history, its concept; they do not talk about imperialism, much less about the necessary anti-imperialism.
By SERAPHIM PIETROFORTE: Ernesto Manuel de Melo e Castro, the most ingenious poet in the Portuguese language
By LEONARDO BOFF: Under the word “Kindness” lies what is most refined and noble in human beings, the kindness that is so absent and yet so necessary in the bad times we live in.
By CARLA TEIXEIRA: The Attorney General's Office's complaint against military personnel cannot dispel the political debate on reform in the Armed Forces
By RODRIGO BASTOS: Every deconstruction of thought requires a deep understanding of the historical process that generated its object of attention.
By JOSÉ RAIMUNDO TRINDADE: Considerations on the materialist theory of the State
By DIEGO VIANA: Electorally, fascism has never been so strong. In the USA, Brazil and India, all highly populated countries, it obtained votes of over 45%, surpassing the maximum of 37% of the Nazis in Germany in 1932.
By GIOVANNI MESQUITA: Herman Melville's novel “Moby Dick” and the true story of the sperm whale that sank the ship Essex
By MARIA RAMOS & EDERGENIO NEGREIROS VIEIRA: We are experiencing a real crisis in public safety, which mainly affects the most vulnerable, in addition to deteriorating the so-called Democratic Rule of Law itself.
By EUGENIO BUCCI: A philosopher once said that hell is other people. Nothing to object to. But for Donald Trump, other people's hell is heaven.
By MÁRIO MAESTRI: Donald Trump's current initiative has as its central objective a distancing, still relative, of Russia from the People's Republic of China, in favor of the USA, in a reversal of the pact of the early 1970s, between Mao
By IVONALDO NERES LEITE: The present time is not a receptacle for a single, homogeneous narrative for the Jewish question. It is not a void of discrepancies regarding political instrumentalization
By AMELIA COHN: Nísia Trindade's departure would mean that, no matter how strong her replacement is, health has entered the market for political (and economic) negotiations
By CATHERINE L. BENAMOU: Excerpt from the recently published book
By BRANKO MILANOVIC: The wild four-week ride, which still doesn't seem to have run out of steam, confirms the idea that the new Donald Trump will govern very differently from the old one
By PAULO NOGUEIRA BATISTA JR.: President Lula runs a serious risk of losing in 2026 and confirming the ill-fated Orloff effect, if he appears in 2026 with a third-way face
By MOU HONGJIN: To successfully host COP30, the country will also need to make progress in reducing its own emissions and offering support to other developing countries.
By LUIZ CARLOS BRESSER-PEREIRA: Academics talk about nationalism, but they refer to their own nationalism, its history, its concept; they do not talk about imperialism, much less about the necessary anti-imperialism.
By SERAPHIM PIETROFORTE: Ernesto Manuel de Melo e Castro, the most ingenious poet in the Portuguese language
By LEONARDO BOFF: Under the word “Kindness” lies what is most refined and noble in human beings, the kindness that is so absent and yet so necessary in the bad times we live in.
By CARLA TEIXEIRA: The Attorney General's Office's complaint against military personnel cannot dispel the political debate on reform in the Armed Forces
By RODRIGO BASTOS: Every deconstruction of thought requires a deep understanding of the historical process that generated its object of attention.