scientific diffusion Seminars and Agenda Researches of the book Trajectories of Inequalities: How has Brazil changed in the last 50 years

Researches of the book Trajectories of Inequalities: How has Brazil changed in the last 50 years

16/02/2016 9:00 am

Seminar at Brazil Institute from Wilson Center, Washington/DC (EUA),discusses researches of the book Trajectories of Inequalities: How has Brazil changed in the last 50 years

The event will be broadcast in live streaming

The challenges Brazil faces nowadays, in particular the ongoing crisis of governance and a deep economic recession, raise important questions about the country’ s capacity to preserve impressive gains it made in recent decades to reduce historically high levels of social, economic,  and political inequalities. This is the context of a daylong seminar the Brazil Institute of the Wilson Center will convene on February 16, in partnership with the University of São Paulo's Center for Metropolitan Studies and the São Paulo Science Foundation (FAPESP).


The discussion will bring together co-authors of the most comprehensive study to date on the various manifestations of inequality in the largest South American nation and scholars from American and Brazilian academic institutions. Published last year, Trajetórias das Desigualdades: como o Brasil mudou nos últimos 50 anos, was received as an important contribution to the social sciences on issues dealing with the connections between democracy, public policies, and inequality. The book presents new research on the trajectories of Brazil’s inequality over the past 50 years. “Its original contribution lies in being the first comprehensive study based on solid empirical research dealing with long-term changes in Brazil,” wrote University of São Paulo political science Professor Marta Arretche, who organized and edited the volume summarized here (hyperlink). “On a theoretical level, the book’s main contribution consists of demonstrating that the path toward inequality-reduction comprises multiple and connected dimensions whose origins are independent. Neither  industrialization democracy are sufficient conditions for this purpose.”

Trajetórias das Desigualdades brings together in a single volume a collection of studies on the different aspects of the social and economic structures considered important for research on inequality, such as: unequal political participation; access to education, health and public services; insertion in the labor market; race and gender issues. Also present in the book are detailed studies on the connections between inequality and the trajectory of migration and religious affiliation. The volume presents in fourteen thematic chapters a detailed and comprehensive outlook on inequality, addressing different dimensions of the problem. All chapters have quantitative and longitudinal studies based on data from six editions of the Demographic Census, from 1960 to 2010. The studies examine the connections across different macro transitions — from a rural country to an urban one; from an authoritarian to a democratic regime; from a stagnant to a growing economy— and the policy direction of democratic governments. It also explores the trajectory of different dimensions of inequality.

Registrations must be done on the event website.

PROGRAMME

Trajectories of Inequalities in Brazil

9:00am: Opening Session

Welcome, by Paulo Sotero, Director, Brazil Institute

The book content: Trajectories of Inequality in Brazil, by Marta Arretche, Professor of Political Science, University of São Paulo

 

9:45am: First Session - The policies on Politics

Chair:  Maria Herminia Tavares de Almeida, Senior Researcher, Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP)

Political Participation, by Fernando Limongi, Professor of Political Science, University of São Paulo, and José Antonio Cheibub, University Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois

Councils, associations, and inequality, by Adrian Gurza Lavalle, Professor of Political Science, University of São Paulo

Discussants: Daniel Gingerich, Associate Professor and Director of Quantitative Collaborative, University of Virginia and Matthew Taylor, Associate Professor of International Service, American University

 

11:15am: Coffee Break

 

11:30am: Second Session: Education Policy

Chair: Matthew Taylor, American University

Education and inequality in Brazil, by Naercio Menezes Filho, Professor, Institute of Education and Research, INSPER

Educational stratification among youth in Brazil, by Carlos A.C. Ribeiro, Professor of Social and Political Studies, Rio de Janeiro State University (UERJ)

Discussant: David Lam, Director of the Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan

 

1:00pm: Lunch Discussion: The current Brazilian crisis

Carlos Eduardo Lins da Silva, Special Advisor, FAPESP; Paulo Sotero, Brazil Institute; Matthew Taylor, American University; Sergei Soares, Visiting Fellow, Center for Global Development

 

2:00 pm: Third Session: Urban infrastructure and services

Chair: Carlos Eduardo Lins Da Silva, Senior Adivsor, São Paulo Science Foundation, FAPESP

Urban Conditions, by Eduardo Marques, Vice-Director at CEM and Livre-docente Professor of Political Science, University of São Paulo

Territorial inequalities, by Marta Arretche, University of São Paulo

Discussant: Peter Ward, University Professor of Sociology, University of Texas

 

3:30pm: Coffee Break

 

3:45 pm: Concluding Session: The path toward inequality-reduction

Chair: Sergei Soares, Center for Global Development

The path toward inequality-reduction, by Marta Arretche, University of São Paulo

Discussants: Kenneth Roberts, University Professor of Comparative and Latin American Politics, Cornell University and Maria Herminia Tavares de Almeida, Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP)

 

For the full program to download click here

Press release of the book

 

Speakers

    Paulo Sotero -  Director, Brazil Institute
    Marta Arretche -  University of São Paulo
    Adrian Lavalle -   University of São Paulo
    Carlos Antonio Costa Ribeiro -  Rio de Janeiro State University (UERJ)
    Daniel Gingerich -  University of Virginia
    David Lam -  University of Michigan
    Eduardo Marques -  University of São Paulo
    Fernando Limongi -   University of São Paulo
    Jose Antonio Cheibub - University of Illinois
    Kenneth Roberts - Cornell University
    Maria Herminia Tavares de Almeida - Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP)
    Matthew Taylor -  Fellow
    Naercio Aquino Menezes Filho -  Institute of Education and Research (INSPER)
    Peter Ward - Professor of Public Affairs and Sociology, C. B. Smith Centennial Chair in US-Mexico Relations, University of Texas at Austin
    Sergei Soares - Center for Global Development

Fotos do evento:


POST-EVENT

The modern challenges Brazil faces, in particular the ongoing crisis of governance and a deep economic recession, raise important questions about the country’ s capacity to preserve impressive gains it made in recent decades to reduce historically high levels of social, economic, and political inequalities. This is the context of a daylong seminar at the Brazil Institute of the Wilson Center  in partnership with the University of São Paulo's Center for Metropolitan Studies and the São Paulo Science Foundation (FAPESP).

The discussion brought together co-authors of the most comprehensive study to date on the various manifestations of inequality in the largest South American nation, and scholars from American and Brazilian academic institutions. Published last year, Trajetórias das Desigualdades: como o Brasil mudou nos últimos 50 anos, was received as an important contribution to the social sciences on issues dealing with the connections between democracy, public policies, and inequality. The book presents new research on the trajectories of Brazil’s inequality over the past 50 years. “Its original contribution lies in being the first comprehensive study based on solid empirical research dealing with long-term changes in Brazil,” wrote University of São Paulo political science Professor Marta Arretche, who organized and edited the volume summarized here ([Fix hyperlink]). “On a theoretical level, the book’s main contribution consists of demonstrating that the path toward inequality reduction comprises multiple and connected dimensions whose origins are independent. Neither industrialization nor democracy are sufficient conditions for this purpose.”

Trajetórias das Desigualdades brings together in a single volume a collection of studies on the different aspects of the social and economic structures considered important for research on inequality, such as: unequal political participation; access to education, health and public services; insertion in the labor market; race and gender issues. Also present in the book are detailed studies on the connections between inequality and the trajectory of migration and religious affiliation. The volume presents in fourteen thematic chapters a detailed and comprehensive outlook on inequality, addressing different dimensions of the problem. All chapters have quantitative and longitudinal studies based on data from six editions of the Demographic Census, from 1960 to 2010. The studies examine the connections across different macro transitions—from a rural country to an urban one; from an authoritarian to a democratic regime; from a stagnant to a growing economy—and the policy direction of democratic governments. It also explores the trajectory of different dimensions of inequality.

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