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Building a Legal Framework for Public Policies on Early Childhood
FIRST INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR OF THE PARLIAMENTARY FRONT FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD– NATIONAL CONGRESS OF BRAZIL SECOND INTERNATIONAL MEETING OF THE HEMISPHERIC NETWORK OF LEGISLATORS AND FORMER LEGISLATORS FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD On Building a Legal Framework for Public Policies on Early Childhood FINAL REPORT May 31, 2013 Brasilia, Brazil, April 16-18, 2013 The First International Seminar took place on April 16-18, 2013 in the Auditorium Narea Ramos- Chamber of Deputies and had as its purpose, to contribute to the building of a legal framework for public policies that guarantee sustainability, that are in line with new scientific discoveries, values and guarantees the most adequate comprehensive care for all children ages 0-6 of Brazil and the continent. In Brazil, early childhood public policies gained relevance in the last years through federal, state, and municipal programs. The First International Seminar was convened by the Hemispheric Network of Legislators and Former Legislators for Early Childhood and the Parliamentary Front for Early Childhood of the National Congress of Brazil, in which deputies from nine political parties participate. It counted on the highest level of political support, represented by five federal ministers, congressional deputies, world level experts and legislators from: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, United States, Guatemala, Holland, Mexico, Panama, and Peru, who along with 500 governmental authorities, civil society and corporations of Brazil, developed an agenda, consistent with the objectives and expected results for the event. The ministers and the technical, private, and academic authorities of Brazil agreed on counting with legislation that guarantees progress after evaluating best practices in early childhood public policies in various sectors and different levels within the government. -
By U JUN 251997
Shattered Power, Reconstructed Coalitions: An Analysis of Rural Labor Unions in Maranhio, Brazil by Monica F. Pinhanez Bachelor of Laws, Pontifical Catholic University, 1987 Master of Public Administration, Getnlio Vargas Foundation, 1995 SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF URBAN STUDIES AND PLANNING IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER IN CITY PLANNING AT THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY JUNE 1997 0 1997 Monica F. Pinhanez. All rights reserved. The author hereby grants to MIT permission to reproduce and to distribute publicly paper and electronic copies of this thesis document in whole or in part. Signature of Author: U epartment of Urban 5thdies and Planning May 22, 1997 Certified by: Judith Tendler Professor of Political Economy Thesis Advisor Accepted by: Mark Schuster Associate Professor of Urban Studies and Planning Chair, Master in City Planning Committee JUN 251997 Shattered Power, Reconstructed Coalitions: An Analysis of Rural Labor Unions in Maranhilo, Brazil by Monica F. Pinhanez Submitted to the Department of Urban Studies and Planning on May 22, 1997 in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of City Planning ABSTRACT During the dictatorship (1964-1985), the authoritarian political system enforced the organization of the labor movement by law in Brazil. The government aimed at keeping control of workers' organization by establishing the monopoly of their representation, centralizing control, and imposing a uniform labor structure. One prevalent argument in the literature is that this corporatist and monopolistic union structure would lead unions to be less democratic and less organized. Contrary to this mainstream thought, I found evidence that in spite of the corporatist and monopolistic regime, rural labor unions differed from each other and represented workers successfully in the state of Maranhio, Brazil, because there has been competition among unions and non-union organizations for the union leadership. -
Líderes Do PMDB Dizem Adeus a Afrísio Vieira
B2 POLÍTICA SALVADOR TERÇA-FEIRA 12/1/2016 Mila Cordeiro/ Ag. A TARDE MEMÓRIA Vice-presidente e ministro Emoção e participam de ato fúnebre em Salvador saudade durante o Líderes do sepultamento Emoção e muita saudade marcaram a despedida do PMDB dizem ex-deputado federal Afrísio Vieira Lima que, ao longo da vida pública, ocupou cargos no governo federal, em ór- adeus a gãos como Incra, Codeba (Companhia de Docas do Es- tado da Bahia) e foi presi- dentedaJuceb(JuntaComer- Afrísio Vieira cial da Bahia). Os filhos Lúcio, Geddel, e Afrísio Filho, que acompa- nharam o velório ao lado da mãe, dona Marluce Qua- PATRÍCIA FRANÇA mara e grande desafeto da dros, e dos sete netos, não presidente Dilma Rousseff escondiam a dor da grande O vice-presidente da Repú- (PT), Eduardo Cunha (RJ). perda. “Eu perdi o amor da blica e presidente nacional Mais do que prestar uma minha vida, meu grande do PMDB, Michel Temer, homenagem ao “velho” companheirodejornada.Es- acompanhado de três lide- Afrísio e aos irmãos Vieira tou mortificado”, disse Ged- ranças nacionais do partido, Lima, ambos favoráveis ao del, amparado por amigos, estiveram, ontem, em Salva- rompimento do PMDB com logo após o sepultamento. dor, para a cerimônia de se- o governo, a presença da cú- Dona Marluce disse à re- pultamento do ex-deputado pula ligada a Temer foi vista, portagem que Afrisio era a AfrísioVieiraLima,quemor- por políticos presentes ao “coisa maior” que tinha na reu na noite do último do- velório, como um recado à vida. “Um homem bom, um mingo, aos 86 anos. -
December /2016
CNI Indicators • ISSN 2317-7012 • Year 6 • Number 4 • December 2016 CNI-Ibope survey GOVERNMENT EVALUATION December /2016 CNI-Ibope survey GOVERNMENT EVALUATION December / 2016 © 2016. CNI - National Confederation of Industry. Any part of this publication may be copied, provided that the source is mentioned. CNI Research and Competitiveness Unit - GPC CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA P474g National Confederation of Industry CNI-Ibope survey - Government evaluation - (December 2016). – Brasília: CNI, 2016. 10 p. ISBN 2317-7012 1. Evaluation of the government. 2. Government of Brazil. 3. Survey research CDU: 354 (049.5) CNI National Confederation of Industry - Brazil Customer Service – SAC Setor Bancário Norte Tels.: +55 61 3317-9989 / 3317-9992 Quadra 1 – Bloco C [email protected] Edifício Roberto Simonsen 70040-903 – Brasília – DF Tel.: +55 61 3317- 9000 Fax: +55 61 3317- 9994 http://www.cni.org.br Pesquisa CNI-Ibope - Avaliação do Governo ISSN 2317-7012 • Ano 6 • Número 4 • dezembro de 2016 Temer Administration Review The percentage of people who have come to 26%, fluctuating within the survey’s margin of no decision about the Temer government has error. The same goes for those who rate the started to fall. In the September survey, 12% of government as excellent or good: down from respondents neither wanted nor were able to 14% to 13%. assess the government, with 17% feeling the same about the president’s way of governing. In Prospects for the remainder of the Temer December, these percentages are down to 6% administration are more pessimistic. The and 10% respectively. proportion of respondents who believe that the remainder of the government will be excellent This reduced level of indecision has been or good dropped from 24% to 18%, while the accompanied by dissatisfaction with the percentage that believes it will be bad or terrible government. -
Brazil Ahead of the 2018 Elections
BRIEFING Brazil ahead of the 2018 elections SUMMARY On 7 October 2018, about 147 million Brazilians will go to the polls to choose a new president, new governors and new members of the bicameral National Congress and state legislatures. If, as expected, none of the presidential candidates gains over 50 % of votes, a run-off between the two best-performing presidential candidates is scheduled to take place on 28 October 2018. Brazil's severe and protracted political, economic, social and public-security crisis has created a complex and polarised political climate that makes the election outcome highly unpredictable. Pollsters show that voters have lost faith in a discredited political elite and that only anti- establishment outsiders not embroiled in large-scale corruption scandals and entrenched clientelism would truly match voters' preferences. However, there is a huge gap between voters' strong demand for a radical political renewal based on new faces, and the dramatic shortage of political newcomers among the candidates. Voters' disillusionment with conventional politics and political institutions has fuelled nostalgic preferences and is likely to prompt part of the electorate to shift away from centrist candidates associated with policy continuity to candidates at the opposite sides of the party spectrum. Many less well-off voters would have welcomed a return to office of former left-wing President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), who due to a then booming economy, could run social programmes that lifted millions out of extreme poverty and who, barred by Brazil's judiciary from running in 2018, has tried to transfer his high popularity to his much less-known replacement. -
Construction Companies Pressure for Credit and Low Interest Rate
(http://globo.com) g1 (http://g1.globo.com) ge gshow (http://gshow.globo.com) famosos vídeos (http://globoplay.globo.com) Print () 12:00 AM (GMT 03:00) – Jan 11 2017 Construction companies pressure for credit and low interest rate By Raymundo Costa and Andrea Jubé | Brasília Negotiations between construction companies involved in the Petrobras corruption scandal and the government about the Investment Partnerships Program (PPI) have stalled. Valor has learned that the companies started talks as if nothing had happened in the last two years, when the investigations of Operation Car Wash upended the industry’s relations with the government, and were sharply rebuked by PPI Secretary Moreira Franco. The companies made an extensive list of requests, but the main one is aimed at the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES). Shut out of bank loans, the companies want subsidized credit from the development bank. They also want to renegotiate contracts signed when Dilma Rousseff was still president, due to the recession's effects. The government responded by asking them to forfeit their concessions if they are unable to pay. Companies pretended they didn’t understand the initial message and redoubled efforts in the last few days, resorting to patriotic arguments – “Brazil is in crisis,” the “nation” must start investing again and other similar claims. During one such talk, Mr. Franco, who is also under investigation by Car Wash, responded by saying the companies apparently had not understood that Brazil changed and the usual practices of before have become unacceptable now. The construction companies even said they may not bid in the PPI auctions under current conditions. -
00 Preliminares 12 TBE 2015.Indd
BRAZIL NEWS BRIEFS POLITICS Vetoes on spending bills upheld Brazil’s Congress has upheld President Dilma Rousseff’s vetoes of two bills to raise public spending, a victory for the embattled leader as she tries to close a gaping fiscal deficit and regain investors’ confidence. Opposition lawmakers failed Photo:Wilson Dias/Agencia Brasil. to reach the absolute majority needed to override the president’s vetoes of one bill to raise benefit payments to retirees Brasil. Pozzebom/Agencia Rodrigues Fabio Photo: and another that would have granted steep wage hikes for court employees. The two bills would have cost 47 billion reais (US$12.43 billion) in extra spending Speaker of the House Eduardo Cunha President Dilma Rousseff over four years, the Finance Ministry estimated. (November 19) Congress moves to impeach Workers Party, which Rousseff represents, President Rousseff decided to support proceedings in Eduardo Cunha, speaker of the the House Ethics Council to remove lower house of Brazil’s Congress, has speaker Cunha, who has been accused announced plans to open impeachment of accepting bribes in the Petrobras corruption scandal. Cunha denied the proceedings against President Dilma Photo: José Cruz./Agência Brasil. Rousseff, in response to charges allegations but it has been confirmed that in 2014 she violated the law by that the speaker and family members manipulating government finances to had bank accounts in Switzerland with benefit her re-election campaign. If the deposit dates and amounts that closely committee hearing the charges, -
Religious Leaders in Politics
International Journal of Latin American Religions https://doi.org/10.1007/s41603-020-00123-1 THEMATIC PAPERS Open Access Religious Leaders in Politics: Rio de Janeiro Under the Mayor-Bishop in the Times of the Pandemic Liderança religiosa na política: Rio de Janeiro do bispo-prefeito nos tempos da pandemia Renata Siuda-Ambroziak1,2 & Joana Bahia2 Received: 21 September 2020 /Accepted: 24 September 2020/ # The Author(s) 2020 Abstract The authors discuss the phenomenon of religious and political leadership focusing on Bishop Marcelo Crivella from the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (IURD), the current mayor of the city of Rio de Janeiro, in the context of the political involvement of his religious institution and the beginnings of the COVID-19 pandemic. In the article, selected concepts of leadership are applied in the background of the theories of a religious field, existential security, and the market theory of religion, to analyze the case of the IURD leadership political involvement and bishop/mayor Crivella’s city management before and during the pandemic, in order to show how his office constitutes an important part of the strategies of growth implemented by the IURD charismatic leader Edir Macedo, the founder and the head of this religious institution and, at the same time, Crivella’s uncle. The authors prove how Crivella’s policies mingle the religious and the political according to Macedo’s political alliances at the federal level, in order to strengthen the church and assure its political influence. Keywords Religion . Politics . Leadership . Rio de Janeiro . COVID-19 . Pandemic Palavras-chave Religião . -
1995,Brazil's Zumbi Year, Reflections on a Tricentennial Commemoration
1995,Brazil’s Zumbi Year, Reflections on a Tricentennial Commemoration Richard Marin To cite this version: Richard Marin. 1995,Brazil’s Zumbi Year, Reflections on a Tricentennial Commemoration. 2017. hal-01587357 HAL Id: hal-01587357 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01587357 Preprint submitted on 10 Mar 2019 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Richard Marin 1995, BRAZIL’S ZUMBI YEAR: REFLECTIONS ON A TRICENTENNIAL COMMEMORATION In 1995, the Brazilian commemorations in honor of the tricentennial of the death of Zumbi, the legendary leader of the large maroon community of Palmares, took on every appearance of a genuine social phenomenon. The Black Movement and part of Brazilian civil society, but also the public authorities, each in different ways, were all committed to marking the event with exceptional grandeur. This article advances a perspective on this commemorative year as an important step in promoting the "Black question" along with Afro-Brazilian identity. After describing the 1995 commemorations, we aim to show how they represented the culmination of already-existing movements that had been at work in the depths of Brazilian society. We will finish by considering the period following the events of 1995, during which "the Black question" becomes truly central to debates in Brazilians society. -
Freedom in the World Report 2020
Brazil | Freedom House Page 1 of 19 BrazilFREEDOM IN THE WORLD 2020 75 FREE /100 Political Rights 31 Civil Liberties 44 75 Free Global freedom statuses are calculated on a weighted scale. See the methodology. Overview https://freedomhouse.org/country/brazil/freedom-world/2020 3/6/2020 Brazil | Freedom House Page 2 of 19 Brazil is a democracy that holds competitive elections, and the political arena is characterized by vibrant public debate. However, independent journalists and civil society activists risk harassment and violent attack, and the government has struggled to address high rates of violent crime and disproportionate violence against and economic exclusion of minorities. Corruption is endemic at top levels, contributing to widespread disillusionment with traditional political parties. Societal discrimination and violence against LGBT+ people remains a serious problem. Key Developments in 2019 • In June, revelations emerged that Justice Minister Sérgio Moro, when he had served as a judge, colluded with federal prosecutors by offered advice on how to handle the corruption case against former president Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva, who was convicted of those charges in 2017. The Supreme Court later ruled that defendants could only be imprisoned after all appeals to higher courts had been exhausted, paving the way for Lula’s release from detention in November. • The legislature’s approval of a major pension reform in the fall marked a victory for Brazil’s far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, who was inaugurated in January after winning the 2018 election. It also signaled a return to the business of governing, following a period in which the executive and legislative branches were preoccupied with major corruption scandals and an impeachment process. -
The Democratic Party and the Transformation of American Conservatism, 1847-1860
PRESERVING THE WHITE MAN’S REPUBLIC: THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF AMERICAN CONSERVATISM, 1847-1860 Joshua A. Lynn A dissertation submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History. Chapel Hill 2015 Approved by: Harry L. Watson William L. Barney Laura F. Edwards Joseph T. Glatthaar Michael Lienesch © 2015 Joshua A. Lynn ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT Joshua A. Lynn: Preserving the White Man’s Republic: The Democratic Party and the Transformation of American Conservatism, 1847-1860 (Under the direction of Harry L. Watson) In the late 1840s and 1850s, the American Democratic party redefined itself as “conservative.” Yet Democrats’ preexisting dedication to majoritarian democracy, liberal individualism, and white supremacy had not changed. Democrats believed that “fanatical” reformers, who opposed slavery and advanced the rights of African Americans and women, imperiled the white man’s republic they had crafted in the early 1800s. There were no more abstract notions of freedom to boundlessly unfold; there was only the existing liberty of white men to conserve. Democrats therefore recast democracy, previously a progressive means to expand rights, as a way for local majorities to police racial and gender boundaries. In the process, they reinvigorated American conservatism by placing it on a foundation of majoritarian democracy. Empowering white men to democratically govern all other Americans, Democrats contended, would preserve their prerogatives. With the policy of “popular sovereignty,” for instance, Democrats left slavery’s expansion to territorial settlers’ democratic decision-making. -
How JBS Is Still Slaughtering the Amazon
Slaughtering the Amazon In response to a July 2020 letter from Greenpeace UK, Burger King and Tesco confirmed that they were supplied by JBS subsidiaries (Burger King: Moy Park; Tesco: both Moy Park and Tulip). In September 2019, in response to a letter from Greenpeace UK, Aldi and Waitrose both confirmed JBS- linked supplies (Aldi: Moy Park and Tulip; Waitrose: Moy Park). In its FAQs, under ‘Who supplies you with chicken?’, Nando’s names Moy Park as one of its suppliers; Waitrose also lists Moy Park as a long-term poultry supplier on its website under ‘About our chicken’. In January 2020, a Bloomberg database chain- of-custody search identified trade between JBS subsidiary Pilgrim’s Pride (the parent company of both Moy Park and Tulip) and the following: Burger King, McDonald’s, Sainsbury’s, Tesco and YUM! (YUM! is the parent company of a number of fast food chains, including KFC.) Reports of direct links between JBS subsidiaries and KFC include specialist trade media (eg Ridler J (2018), Mulligan J (2017) and Lucas A (2020)). is still Slaughtering the Amazon the still Slaughtering is Additionally, factory codes UK 3005 EC and UK 3011 EC, documented in August 2019 on the labels of chickens in Sainsbury’s stores, link to How Moy Park facilities. Contents Executive summary Part 2: How industrial meat High stakes – how industrial meat is cooking the climate is taking us to the tipping point 1 Taking stock – JBS, the world’s largest What a carve-up – industrial meat producer, is still slaughtering the Amazon 2 meat’s impact 48 Supporting