Read more about it here – in Portuguese [find out here]. Read more about budget cuts to Brazilian higher education system here [1] [2] [3] [4]
Read more about it here – in Portuguese [find out here] and about the military in the Amazon here [1]
Read more about it here – in Portuguese [find out here] and about the extinction of the secretariat responsible for the pact here [find out here]
Read more about it here in Portuguese [find out here] and about other measures to weaken the idependence and autonomy of federal universities here [find out here] [find out here]
Read more about it here – in Portuguese [find out here]. Read more about this context here [1]. Bolsonaro has also neglected indigenous special vulnerability and health needs amid Covid-19 pandemic [2]
Read more about it here [1]
Read more about it, in Portuguese, here [find out here] and here [1], and read more about this exposition [2], another exhibit about brazilian authoritarianism in arts [3] and the denounce made by a political party to the United Nations about the growing censorship against arts and culture in Brazil [4].
Acts that employ tools of constant authoritarian reinvention. Authoritarian manifestations that coexist with the democratic regime and affect democracy as a system of choice of legitimate representatives or as institutional dynamics that protect rights and guarantee pluralism.
Acts justified by tackling the covid-19 pandemic or another emergency. Under the democratic constitutional regime, emergency acts must respect the Constitution and protect the rights to life and health. Even so, because they create exceptional restrictions related to the health crisis, they require constant control over their necessity, proportionality and temporal limitation. In the long run, they demand attention so as not to become an anti-democratic 'new normal' beyond the moment of emergency.