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Lula, Dilma, and Temer: The Rise and Fall of Brazilian Foreign Policy

Latin American perspectives, 2019
The rapid rise and fall of Brazilian foreign policy initiatives and capacities across the Lula (2003–2010), Dilma (2011–2016), and Temer (2016–2018) governments cannot be attributed solely to any of these presidential administrations but was also ...
André Luiz Reis da Silva   +1 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

"Ideological Repertoires of the Brazilian Foreign Policy toward Africa across three presidential administrations (1995-2016): from realism to south-south solidarity, and back "

Caderno de Política Exterior, 2018
The article aims to identify the ideological repertoires mobilized by different presidential administrations in the context of the Brazilian foreign policy toward Africa from 1995 to 2016.
José Costa Filho
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Brazilian Foreign Policy in Changing Times

2009
This book analyzes Brazilian foreign policy after the democratic opening of the country in the mid-1980s. To illuminate this topic, authors Tullo Vigevani and Gabriel Cepaluni built an analytical framework which uses three concepts to examine Brazilian Foreign Policy changes over the years: (1) autonomy through distance, (2) autonomy through ...
Gabriel Cepaluni   +2 more
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Normative foreign policy: The Brazilian case

International Interactions, 1981
Brazil is portrayed as one of a group of “New Influentials” in the international system today‐an array of Third World nations whose potential political and economic power augers increased influence in world affairs. Within the last decade the will to become a great power has coincided with the greater capacity to achieve that status.
openaire   +1 more source

Brazilian Foreign Policy in the Cardoso Era

Latin American Perspectives, 2007
The Fernando Henrique Cardoso administration attempted to replace a reactive foreign policy agenda dominated by a logic of autonomy through distance with a proactive international agenda guided by a logic of autonomy through integration . In adopting this agenda, the administration maintained that Brazil would be able to confront its problems and ...
Vigevani, Tullo   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Brazilian Bourgeoisie and Foreign Policy

2023
Tatiana Berringer   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

Tradition and Variation in Brazilian Foreign Policy

Journal of Inter-American Studies, 1967
Mounting Anxieties, frustrations, and fears in Brazil effected a change of government by military force at the end of March of 1964. President Joáo Goulart fled to an Uruguayan exile. Congress, urged by the military, conferred supreme executive power on Marshal Humberto Castelo Branco. Many other sweeping changes followed.
openaire   +1 more source

Brazilian foreign policy in the changing world order

South African Journal of International Affairs, 2009
In the practice of international relations, states can pursue different combinations of foreign policy strategies at different systemic levels. The positions of Southern regional powers such as Brazil, on the one hand, between the centre and periphery of the current world system and, on the other hand, at the nexus of international and regional ...
openaire   +1 more source

History of Brazilian Foreign Policy (1808 to 1945)

Journalists, lawyers, and diplomats constituted the prime authors in the history of Brazilian foreign relations. They usually worked in a laudatory framework and had limited analytical and theoretical skills. This changed in the second half of the twentieth century.
Antônio Carlos Lessa   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

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