Abstract
Dilemas brasileiros em políticas públicas e democracia
Highlights
Brazil is going through an unprecedented economic crisis
In recent discussions at the UN Human Rights Council, Brazil aligned with Islamic countries such as Pakistan and Indonesia in an attempt to defuse the resolution on women’s rights, by proposing to remove references on reproductive rights and sexual health
Indigenous and quilombola communities have attracted the attention of different segments of society to conquest and guarantee rights since the Brazilian Constitution of 1988, it is frightening to witness the magnitude of social risk they currently submitted to
Summary
Brazil is going through an unprecedented economic crisis. The long-term problems, the various possible causes, and the lack of solutions lead to an inevitable question: can we treat this set of problems as the expression of cyclical crisis? Apparently, no. There is some sort of social reaction and is insufficient to stop the dismantling of initiatives carried out by previous governments with different ideological perspectives, whose policies once led Brazil to be considered a global showcase of best practices in these matters. The practices of a recent past, when the dialogue involving production based on land exploitation and the necessary environmental protection resulted in goals and pacts in the public arena that became public policies.
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