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Brazil and the old faces of the right

https://doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2020-8-3-43-53

Abstract

Jair Bolsonaro’s leadership in Brazil fits into the general modern trend towards a more conservative outlook in various parts of the world. This article attempts to explore the reasons for this shift and to discover the keys to understanding it. The article focuses on the dynamics of political processes in Brazil leading up to Jair Bolsonaro’s rise to power and unfolding in the country today. The central question to which the authors seek answer is: what actors and trends are behind this “turn to the right”? Political attitudes are largely driven by discourses of national identity and self-determination, which are reflected in the very nature of any human. The authors identify the anchoring categories of such identities (faith, labor, family) and trace, in historical perspective, the development of political actors and social groups that shape this breakdown into identity groups and predetermine the political dialogue in the state. The article notes the significant influence of the religious component, with it being reflected even in the presence of Evangelicals among top officials. The armed forces continue to provide political support and maintain their stability as guarantors of order. The decentralization of information through social media has intensified the public outreach, with a more heated debate or even a certain polarization of public opinion, although not necessarily having any effect on domestic or foreign policy decisions. The socio-economic axes on which national decisions are aligned are associated with a feeling of renewal, but in fact many factors point to a lasting conservative orientation.

About the Authors

M. Pizzi
Equilibrium Global
Argentina

Martín Pizzi, Managing Editor

CP 1646, Argentina, Provincia de Buenos Aires, San Fernando, av. Presidente Perón, 45, 3/A



M. Rodríguez Ossés
Globalizar Foundation
Argentina

Martín Rodríguez Ossés, analyst in International Politics

CP 1407, Argentina, Capital Federal, Loberva 47, PB/2



References

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3. Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Fredrich. The Phenomenology of Spirit. Edited and translated by Terry Pinkard and Michael Baur. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781139050494.

4. Madero, Carlos Castro, and Esteban A. Takacs. Política Nuclear Argentina. ¿Avance o Retroceso? [Argentina’s nuclear policy: forward or backward?]. Buenos Aires: El Ateneo, 1991. [In Spanish]

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6. Sapolsky, Robert. “This is Your Brain on Nationalism.” Foreign Affairs 98, no. 2 (2019): 42-27.


Review

For citations:


Pizzi M., Rodríguez Ossés M. Brazil and the old faces of the right. Cuadernos Iberoamericanos. 2020;8(3):43-53. (In Esp.) https://doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2020-8-3-43-53

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ISSN 2409-3416 (Print)
ISSN 2658-5219 (Online)