Winds of change in Brazil, or an ill breeze?
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Former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is ahead in the polls. But will his authoritarian rival, incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro, accept the result if he loses?
Jair Bolsonaro’s administration is profoundly militarised.
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Plus, what the study of 700-year old garbage is revealing about who lived in Islamic Andalusia. Listen to episode 20 of The Conversation Weekly.
COVID-positive.
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How did the British prime minister and Brazilian president’s brush with COVID-19 affect them politically?
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A host of political and social factors have created Brazil’s polarised political climate.
Encounters with ‘the Entity’.
Laura Premack
John of God, the Brazilian spiritual leader accused of sexual assault, exploited women with a network of people dependent on him for money and power.
Women protest Bolsonaro in Brasília, Brazil.
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Women are fighting to tip the Brazilian election by using morals over politics.
EPA-EFE/Fernando Bizerra
As well as having dangerous social and political consequences, a Bolsonaro presidency would mark a massive shift for Brazil’s economy, too.
Bolsonaro: a vote for fascism?
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Brazil could see a return to the dark days of the military dictatorship.
EPA/Fernando Bizerra Jr.
A dejected public and a crowded, unpopular field of candidates make for an unhappy election.
Loud and clear.
EPA/Antonio Lacerda
Can South America’s biggest democracy run properly with a broken, corrupt political class seemingly unable to reform?
An appeals court ruling against Lula may disqualify this popular former Brazilian president from running again in October 2018. Supporters vehemently maintain his innocence.
Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
An appeals court ruling against popular Brazilian ex-president Lula has hotly divided Brazil. A legal scholar argues that this is a case of activist judges taking their anti-graft crusade too far.
Can Brazil’s judges really hold powerful feet to the fire?
Ricαrdo from Fortaleza/CE, Brasil, via Wikimedia Commons
Brazil’s political and business elites are consumed by scandal, but the courts are hardly squeaky clean.
Protesters celebrate after former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was convicted on corruption charges.
Reuters/Rodolfo Buhrer
Now that a judge has convicted Luiz Inacio da Silva of corruption and sentenced him him to almost a decade in prison, what’s next for the country that loves him?
EPA/Antonio Lacerda
As a former president goes down for nine-and-a-half years, Brazil’s judicial structures are weathering the political crisis well.