Results 91 to 100 of about 26,981 (285)

The Business of Belonging: Homocapitalism, Homonormativity and Cu/Queer Economic Geographies in São Paulo, Brazil

open access: yesAntipode, Volume 58, Issue 2, March 2026.
Abstract This paper examines corporate LGBTQ+ activism and the productive incorporation of queers into capitalism in Brazil. Mobilising transnational queer materialist critiques in tandem with critical perspectives from teoria do cu, the paper sheds light on how homonormativity operates not simply as a set of cultural norms or representational tropes ...
Olimpia Burchiellaro
wiley   +1 more source

A expansão da Guerra Cisplatina para a margem africana do Atlântico [PDF]

open access: yesNavigator, 2014
In this article we will try to prove that the Cisplatin war (1825-1828) originated needs of protection in the Transatlantic Trade of african slaves to Brazil, because privateers of the united provinces of the River Plate crossed the Atlantic aiming to ...
Marcelo Rodrigues de Oliveira
doaj  

Assemblage, archive, and ancestor: Developing more‐than‐human historical geography with salmon

open access: yesGeographical Research, Volume 64, Issue 1, February 2026.
This paper interrogates recent geographic literature on the more‐than‐human archive and argues that there needs to be more specificity when conceptualising and researching the more‐than‐human. It then answers this call for specificity by theorising three modes of more‐than‐human historical geography that are developed through empirical encounters with ...
Austin Read
wiley   +1 more source

O COMÉRCIO NEGREIRO NA CLANDESTINIDADE: AS FAZENDAS DE RECEPÇÃO DE AFRICANOS DA FAMÍLIA SOUZA BREVES E SEUS CATIVOS

open access: yesAfro-Ásia, 2013
This article analyzes the involvement of one of the Brazilian Empire's richest families in the illegal trade to Africa. The brothers José and Joaquim de Souza Breves, men of prominence in 19th Brazilian century politics and society, built a territorial ...
Thiago Campos Pessoa
doaj  

Preventing financial ruin: How the West India trade fostered creativity in crisis lending by the Bank of England

open access: yesThe Economic History Review, Volume 79, Issue 1, Page 57-88, February 2026.
Abstract This paper contributes to the understanding of the complex relationship between British economic performance during the Napoleonic wars and the ‘West Indies’, as the Caribbean slave colonies were called. Not only did profits from slave‐based commerce provide financing for the growth of the financial sector, as has been claimed, but the risk of
Carolyn Sissoko, Mina Ishizu
wiley   +1 more source

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