
Political ideas
By LUIZ MARQUES: Resentment feeds anti-republican feelings, an aversion to egalitarian norms. Its revolt targets the subordinate position in the hierarchy, not the system.
By LUIZ MARQUES: Resentment feeds anti-republican feelings, an aversion to egalitarian norms. Its revolt targets the subordinate position in the hierarchy, not the system.
By MIGUEL ENRIQUE STEDILE: Considerations on Valerio Arcary's recently released book
By LUIZ MARQUES: Hallucinations today serve the interests of the extreme right, which always maintains an active distrust of cognitive rationality and the institutions of the Republic.
By RUI ABREU*
The path followed by Fernando Haddad and by implication by the Lula government is to give up on the political dispute
By CICERO ARAUJO: The current Lula government seems to be stuck in a kind of modified version of “Stockholm syndrome”
By JOÃO DOS REIS SILVA JUNIOR: The PT needs to quickly find a way to articulate its different schools of thought to face the attacks from the rentier sector and the global threat from the extreme right
By MARCUS IANONI: What do Morena, AMLO and Claudia Scheinbaum have that we can't have too?
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 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 LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: Democracy needs to be radicalized, with a more ambitious commitment to social justice
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 TARSUS GENUS: Fernando Haddad stopped the coup anomie and put politics in its rightful place
By DANIEL AFONSO DA SILVA: The French are witnessing the end of the Fifth Republic before their very eyes
By WESLLEY CANTELMO: The logic of fiscal restriction imposed on Brazil has had several institutional forms, reaching its peak as the “Spending Ceiling”, but has its contemporary form in the so-called “Fiscal Framework”
By JOÃO CARLOS BRUM TORRES: The dollar's surge is a speculative attack by the most powerful political actor in Brazil, the market party, whose objective is to prevent the current government from receiving any recognition for its excellent performance.
By LEDA PAULANI: Campos Neto fulfilled with cowardly bravery his pusillanimous mission of initiating the movement to reverse the positive expectations that were emerging for the economic scenario under the Lula government
By RENATO NUCCI JR. & LEONARDO SACRAMENTO: The term poor on the right is a way for segments of the left to free themselves from the responsibility they have for the political and social situation we find ourselves in.
By JOSE LUIS OREIRO: If adequate instruments are given to the Central Bank, as was done in the Euro crisis in 2012, the Central Bank will be able to do what is necessary for the stability of the currency.
By LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: The success of Brazilian agriculture begins with the strange disappearance of the word “latifundio” from our vocabulary
By TARSUS GENUS: The arrest of the general is the culmination of the change in the quality of the high-intensity crisis, which has been going on since the medievalist inquisition launched by the Republic of Curitiba
By LUIZ MARQUES: Resentment feeds anti-republican feelings, an aversion to egalitarian norms. Its revolt targets the subordinate position in the hierarchy, not the system.
By MIGUEL ENRIQUE STEDILE: Considerations on Valerio Arcary's recently released book
By LUIZ MARQUES: Hallucinations today serve the interests of the extreme right, which always maintains an active distrust of cognitive rationality and the institutions of the Republic.
By RUI ABREU*
The path followed by Fernando Haddad and by implication by the Lula government is to give up on the political dispute
By CICERO ARAUJO: The current Lula government seems to be stuck in a kind of modified version of “Stockholm syndrome”
By JOÃO DOS REIS SILVA JUNIOR: The PT needs to quickly find a way to articulate its different schools of thought to face the attacks from the rentier sector and the global threat from the extreme right
By MARCUS IANONI: What do Morena, AMLO and Claudia Scheinbaum have that we can't have too?
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 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 LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: Democracy needs to be radicalized, with a more ambitious commitment to social justice
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 TARSUS GENUS: Fernando Haddad stopped the coup anomie and put politics in its rightful place
By DANIEL AFONSO DA SILVA: The French are witnessing the end of the Fifth Republic before their very eyes
By WESLLEY CANTELMO: The logic of fiscal restriction imposed on Brazil has had several institutional forms, reaching its peak as the “Spending Ceiling”, but has its contemporary form in the so-called “Fiscal Framework”
By JOÃO CARLOS BRUM TORRES: The dollar's surge is a speculative attack by the most powerful political actor in Brazil, the market party, whose objective is to prevent the current government from receiving any recognition for its excellent performance.
By LEDA PAULANI: Campos Neto fulfilled with cowardly bravery his pusillanimous mission of initiating the movement to reverse the positive expectations that were emerging for the economic scenario under the Lula government
By RENATO NUCCI JR. & LEONARDO SACRAMENTO: The term poor on the right is a way for segments of the left to free themselves from the responsibility they have for the political and social situation we find ourselves in.
By JOSE LUIS OREIRO: If adequate instruments are given to the Central Bank, as was done in the Euro crisis in 2012, the Central Bank will be able to do what is necessary for the stability of the currency.
By LUIS FELIPE MIGUEL: The success of Brazilian agriculture begins with the strange disappearance of the word “latifundio” from our vocabulary
By TARSUS GENUS: The arrest of the general is the culmination of the change in the quality of the high-intensity crisis, which has been going on since the medievalist inquisition launched by the Republic of Curitiba