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  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-108">
    <title>The precariousness of labor and Alfredo Bosi's thinking are themes of "Estudos Avançados" #108</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-108</link>
    <description> </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/capa-de-estudos-avancados-108/@@images/18bd9f82-2b90-493b-b1ad-7409e4ef3f67.jpeg" alt="Capa de Estudos Avançados 108" class="image-right" title="Capa de Estudos Avançados 108" /></p>
<p><span>The new professional and occupational requirements, the precariousness of employment, and the suppression of rights and guarantees are the central themes of the dossier "Work and Exclusion," part of </span><i><a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/journal" class="external-link">Estudos Avançados</a></i><span> #108</span><span>, whose digital version is now available, free of charge, at the </span><a class="external-link" href="https://www.scielo.br/j/ea/i/2023.v37n108/">Scientific Electronic Library Online</a><span> (Portuguese only)</span><span>.</span></p>
<p>The issue also features a set of 11 articles on the activity of <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/researchers/alfredo-bosi" class="external-link">Alfredo Bosi</a> (1936-2021) as a literary critic and engaged thinker. Professor emeritus from the University of São Paulo's Faculty of Philosophy, Languages and Literature, and Human Sciences (FFLCH), and a member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters, Bosi has been director of the IEA and editor of the journal <i>Estudos Avançados</i> for 30 years.</p>
<p><span><strong>Paradox</strong></span></p>
<p><span>In the editorial,</span> the journal's editor, <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/researchers/sergio-adorno" class="external-link">Sérgio Adorno</a>, points out that, "in a parallel and paradoxical way, the advanced forms of work organization represented by the complex digitization of industrial production are articulated and coexist with the reinvention of slavery, which was believed to be banished with the emergence of modern society."</p>
<p>An example of the dynamics of this hateful practice is reported in an article with the main results of research on contemporary slave labor carried out in Açailândia, in the Brazilian state of Maranhão, based on the narratives of workers rescued from this condition.</p>
<p>Another extremely relevant issue addressed in the dossier is the analysis of the discussions that have led to the ratification <span>of Convention no. 189 of the International Labor Organization (ILO)</span><span> by Brazil in 2018. It refers to the establishment of dignified working conditions for domestic workers, a category that brings together more than 7 million workers in the country.</span></p>
<p><span> </span><span>Two articles address the socioeconomic impacts of infrastructure works and distortions in the production chain. The first case is discussed in a study on the adequacy of residents of a beach on the coast of the state of Pará to the construction of a highway on the site. Another article adresses the maintenance of injustices in the production chain of Brazil nuts in quilombos in the region of Alto Trombetas, also in Pará.</span></p>
<p dir="ltr"><strong>Literature and Society</strong></p>
<p>The essays on Bosi especially examine aspects of his work as a literary critic, articulated with social and political concerns that have always been present in his trajectory. The composition of a dossier on "an outstanding humanist, who has denounced violence and the abusive use of power to seek solutions that reconciled the conflict, typical of human relations, with the solidarity inherent in the lives of common men and women," <span>in the words of Adorno,</span><span> could not be different.</span></p>
<p>He highlights three concepts present in Bosi's works that are discussed in the dossier: resistance, ideology, and dialectic. The first focuses on the analysis of the poem <span>"The Machine of the World,"</span><span> by Carlos Drummond de Andrade, and on Bosi’s reflections since the 1970s, when he wrote the essay <i>Poesia e Resistência</i> ("Poetry and Resistance").</span></p>
<p>The topic is taken up again in a text that articulates literature and cinema, using films by Roberto Rosselini and Pier Paolo Pasolini, and is also present in an essay on <i>candomblé</i> featured both in the novel "Tent of Miracles," by Jorge Amado, and in its respective cinematographic adaptation by Nelson Pereira dos Santos.</p>
<p>Traits of Bosi's personality and his passion for poetry are recalled in an article that comments on his book <i>O Ser e o Tempo da Poesia</i> ("The Being and the Time of Poetry"). There is also the identification of a psychoanalytic approach of the critic in his analysis of "Counselor Ayres’ Memorial," by Machado de Assis.</p>
<p>The reflections of Bosi and other critics are addressed in a study on the critical position of Graciliano Ramos in relation to the so-called <i>Romance de 30</i>, a set of literary works produced in the second phase of Brazilian Modernism, between 1930 and 1945.</p>
<p>The meaning and functioning of the concept of dialectic expressed by Bosi in the book "Brazil and the Dialectic of Colonization" are discussed in a dense article that articulates several aspects, such as the reception of the work by critic Roberto Schwartz and "a certain affinity of interests and procedures" with spectropoetics, a philosophical and critical approach developed by Jacques Derrida.</p>
<p>Other essays address Bosi's work on the short story as a literary form and on the poet's position as an intellectual in the face of war, with reference to the poem "The Rose of the People," by Carlos Drummond de Andrade, and <span><i>España, Aparta de Mí este Cáliz</i></span>, by César Vallejo.</p>
<p><strong>Reviews</strong></p>
<p>Issue #108 also features reviews of five books: <span><i>Dar Corpo ao Impossível: O Sentido da Dialética a Partir de Theodor Adorno</i></span><span> ("Giving Body to the Impossible: The Sense of Dialectic from Theodor Adorno" (Autêntica, 2019), by Vladimir Safatle; the translation to Theodor Adorno's "</span>Aspects of the New Right-Wing Extremism" <span>(Editora Unesp, 2020); <i>Teatro Legislativo</i> ("Legislative Theater") (Editora 34, 2020), by Augusto Boal; </span><span><i>Imaginação como Presença: O Corpo e seus Afetos na Experiência Literária</i></span><span> ("Imagination as Presence: The Body and its Affections in Literary Experience," (Editora UFPR, 2020), by Lígia Gonçalves Diniz; and <i>Conversa Comigo</i> ("Talk to Me") (Penalux, 2019), by Ricardo Ramos Filho.</span></p>
<p>The list below contains the names of the authors who have contributed with each one of the addressed themes:</p>
<p><strong>Work and Exclusion</strong></p>
<p>In the Webs of Slavery: Perceptions of Workers Rescued from Situations of Slave Labor in the state of Maranhão<span> - </span><i>Luciano Rodrigues Costa, Alessandra Gomes Mendes Tostes, Ana Pereira dos Santos, and</i><i> Bráulio Figueiredo Alves da Silva</i><br /><span>Memories from the Construction of the PA-458 Highway Connecting Bragança to Ajuruteua in Northeastern Pará on Brazil’s Amazon Coast - </span><i>Zenúbia Oliveira Silva, Francisco Pereira de Oliveira, and César Martins de Souza</i><br /><span>Brazil nut Farming and Quilombos in Alto Trombetas (State of Pará): A Proposal for Socio-Environmental Justice - </span><i>Felipe Souto Alves and Patrícia Chaves de Oliveira</i><br /><span>ILO Convention no. 189: Notes on the Ratification Process in Brazil - </span><i>Thays Monticelli and Alexandre Barbosa Fraga</i><br /><span>Agricultural Policy for Agribusiness: The Use of Taxpayers’ Money to Indirectly Benefit Foreign Multinational Corporations - </span><i>Graciella Corcioli and Gabriel da Silva Medina</i><br /><span>Indigenous Peoples of the Desert: The Bedouins of the Negev. Congress in Beer Sheva, 2000: The Future of Indigenous Peoples - </span><i>Betty Mindlin</i></p>
<p><strong>Alfredo Bosi</strong></p>
<p>Faustian Pact and Resistance in the Poem "The Machine of the World"<span> - </span><i>Marcus Vinicius Mazzari</i><br /><span>Alfredo Bosi: Two Approaches - </span><i>Alcides Villaça</i><br /><span>Traits of Psychoanalysis "in Two Figures from Machado de Assis" - </span><i>Cleusa Rios P. Passos</i><br /><span>Times of Insomnia: Graciliano Ramos and the Inflections of the Neorealistic Novels of the 1930s - </span><i>Erwin Torralbo Gimenez</i><br /><span>Poetry and War: Action and Melancholy in Vallejo and Drummond - </span><i>Pedro Meira Monteiro</i><br /><span>Different Forms of Resistance Poetry - </span><i>Fernando Baião Viotti</i><br />Dialectics and Alteritarian Politics in Brazil and the "Dialectic of Colonization"<i> - Ravel Giordano Paz</i><br /><span>Alfredo Bosi and the Short Forms - </span><i>Diego A. Molina</i><br /><span>Libertarian Christianity and Redemption in Roberto Rossellini and Pier Paolo Pasolini - </span><i>Paulo Roberto Ramos</i><br /><span>Aganju, Xangô, Alapalá: Religious Racism, Resistance and Justice in "Tent of Miracles" (the Novel and the Film) - </span><i>Soleni Biscouto Fressato</i><br /><span>Women’s Cinema as Resistance to Dictatorship: Readings from a Research Source - </span><i>Ana Maria Veiga</i></p>
<p><strong>Reviews</strong></p>
<p><i> </i></p>
<p>Dialectics and Political Action: On <i>Dar Corpo ao Impossível</i>, by Vladimir Safatle<span> - </span><i>Ronaldo Tadeu de Souza</i><br /><span>Adorno, Fascism, and the Aporias of Reason - </span><i>Fabio Mascaro Querido</i><br /><span>What Makes Representative Government Democratic? - </span><i>Gustavo Hessmann Dalaqua</i><br /><span>Reflections on Heideggerian Aspects of Lígia Gonçalves Diniz’s Essay - </span><i>Rafael Fava Belúzio</i><br /><span>Understanding Made of Dialogues and Silences - </span><i>Ieda Lebensztayn</i></p>
<p style="text-align: right; "><span class="discreet">Photo: Leonor Calasans/IEA-USP</span></p>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Mauro Bellesa.</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Literature</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Journal</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Sociology</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Publications</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>IEA</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2023-07-20T17:40:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-100">
    <title>"Estudos Avançados" reaches its 100th issue and resumes the dossier on the COVID-19 pandemic</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-100</link>
    <description> </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/capa-de-estudos-avancados-100" alt="Capa de 'Estudos Avançados' 100" class="image-right" title="Capa de 'Estudos Avançados' 100" /></p>
<p>The impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic on economy, labor market, educational and <span>financial</span><span> </span><span>systems, environment, research on drugs, and agribusiness are analyzed in the dossier of the new </span><span>issue of the journal </span><i><a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/journal" class="external-link">Estudos Avançados</a>, </i><span>whose digital version (Portuguese only) is available for free </span><span>at </span><a class="external-link" href="https://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_issuetoc&amp;pid=0103-401420200003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso">SciELO</a><span>.</span></p>
<p>The publication's editor, sociologist <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/researchers/sergio-adorno" class="external-link">Sérgio Adorno</a>, points out that the journal reaches its 100th issue without any interruption in the four-monthly periodicity, maintaining the editorial line defined from the beginning, which focuses on "our contemporaneity and the challenges that the present proposes for the consolidation of fairer societies with quality of life."</p>
<p>This harmony with the problems of the present is revealed with the continuity of the dossier on Covid-19, started in the <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-99" class="external-link">previous issue</a>. Under the title "Impacts of the Pandemic," the set of texts includes 12 articles, of which five are the result of a cycle of virtual meetings on possible scenarios after the pandemic. It has been organized by the IEA, USP's Dean of Research, and the São Paulo State Academy of Sciences (ACIESP).</p>
<p>According to Adorno, the characteristics that stand out in the articles are the density of the <span>adopted </span><span>perspectives, their timeliness, the basis on solid updated bibliography and on documentary reference sources, and the choice of fundamental issues present in the public debate, including current questions in the common and everyday conversations.</span></p>
<p>Part of the dossier includes discussions on medicines and treatment, health, biodiversity, climate change, and policies to protect the Amazon. "There are also important reflections on economic impacts, especially in the productive chains of commodities and value, food, goods, and services," he highlights. "In social terms, reflections on the serious impacts on the labor market, as well as on education, stand out at all levels."</p>
<p>The issue also features texts commemorating the centenary of the births of sociologist Florestan Fernandes and economist Celso Furtado, and the 250th anniversary of Beethoven's birth, in addition to articles on the 100 years after the death of Max Weber.</p>
<p>Adorno also calls attention to a dialogue between Celso Furtado and Fernand Braudel, and to the audio of <span>Beethoven's </span><span>Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 </span><i>Appassionata</i><span> as interpreted by pianist Eduardo Monteiro.</span></p>
<p>At the end of the issue there is an essay on the origin and constitution of the institutes for advanced study existing in the world and their role in the production of cutting-edge knowledge.</p>
<p>Issue #100 is dedicated to the publication's previous editor, Alfredo Bosi, who, <span>in the words of Adorno,</span><span> "ensured the preservation of this heritage from USP and the IEA for three decades (January 1989 - August 2019)."</span></p>
<h3><strong>Dossier</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Medicines</strong></p>
<p>According to Leonardo Ferreira and Adriano Andricopulo, both from the <a class="external-link" href="https://www2.ifsc.usp.br/english/">São Carlos Institute of Physics (IFSC-USP)</a> and the Center for Research and Innovation in Biodiversity and Pharmaceuticals (CIBFar), there are about 2,000 records of clinical trials for investigating approved drugs and other possibilities against COVID-19, including small molecules and biological drugs, not counting vaccines.</p>
<p>However, "drug repositioning has not led to any new antiviral treatment against Covid-19." According to the researchers, the most realistic scenario comprises the development of specific antivirals against SARS-CoV-2 for the safe and effective treatment against the disease.</p>
<p><strong>Education</strong></p>
<p>The impacts on education are analyzed in an article by Bernardete Angelina Gatti, a member of the advisory committee to the Chair of Basic Education (a partnership between the IEA and the Itaú Social Foundation) and senior researcher at the Carlos Chagas Foundation. Gatti discusses the issue of students' learning during the pandemic, the diversity of social realities, the situation of teachers and managers, and curricular, relational and socio-emotional aspects related to isolation and return to schools. She also ponders about the changing possibilities in the educational offer in basic education networks.</p>
<p>Cláudia Costin, a member of IEA's Board and director of the Center for Excellence and Innovation in Educational Policies (CEIPE) at the Getúlio Vargas Foundation, addresses trends in basic education in Brazil in the face of the conditions imposed by the pandemic, of the commitments that Brazil assumed in 2015 in relation to sustainability and, in particular, to the Sustainable Development Goal 4 (to provide quality education) and the so-called Industry 4.0, which tends to rapidly eliminate jobs.</p>
<p><strong>Environment</strong></p>
<p>For physicist Paulo Artaxo, from USP's Institute of Physics (IF), the world and the humanity face three important crises: 1) that of health, intensified by the COVID-19 pandemic; 2) the loss of biodiversity; and 3) the climatic emergency. He points out that the three crises are linked despite having important differences, "but they all have strong social and economic impacts and affect the planet globally."</p>
<p><span class="VIiyi"><span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b"><span>For him, the pandemic has revealed deficiencies in global governance and the climate crisis "has potential for very strong socio-economic damage, reflecting in effects that are already easily visible."</span></span> <span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b"><span>As for the loss of biodiversity, he mentions the risk to food security and to the balance of the terrestrial system.</span></span> <span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b"><span>"The Amazon, for example, contains thousands of viruses in its fauna and flora. The unrestrained process of the region's occupation will </span></span></span><span>possibly </span><span class="VIiyi"><span class="JLqJ4b ChMk0b"><span>make new viruses similar to <span>SARS-CoV-2</span> come into contact with our society."</span></span></span><span> </span></p>
<p>It is necessary to recognize the link between biodiversity, ecosystem services and human health, and thus join efforts in order to prevent the emergence of new pandemics, warn Carlos Alfredo Joly, from the University of Campinas's Institute of Biology, and Helder Lima de Queiroz, from the Mamirauá Instituto for Sustainable Development.</p>
<p>In line with Artaxo's warning, Joly and Queiroz point out that countries like Brazil, "with high levels of social vulnerability and environmental degradation, have a high probability that new pathogens living in wild species will be transferred to human hosts."</p>
<p><strong>Economy</strong></p>
<p>For Simão Davi Silber, a senior professor at USP's School of Economics, Business, and Accounting (FEA), the pandemic has demonstrated how "exogenous adverse shocks in the economic system" disorganize the economy and create a mismatch between the economic world and the possible actions of the State. In his opinion, these actions fail to reach all economic agents to preserve them from the crisis and the result is the "destruction of companies, and of physical and human capital" that will no longer be recovered.</p>
<p>For Camila Villard Duran, from USP's Faculty of Law (FD), however, the international financial market found a way to sustain itself during the pandemic thanks to the consolidation of a model of global monetary cooperation. According to the researcher, the hierarchical network of operations called foreign exchange swaps, headed by the American central bank Federal Reserve (the Fed), "was the legal arrangement structured to support the functioning of the global financial market and its currency par excellence: the Eurodollar."</p>
<p>The reconfiguration of global value chains is the theme of the article by Afonso Fleury, from USP's Polytechnic School (EP), and Maria Tereza Leme Fleury, from FEA-USP and the Getúlio Vargas Foundation (FGV). Both analyze the evolution of these chains - orchestrated by multinationals with the support of digital technologies -, how governments and companies are reacting to the difficulties imposed by the pandemic, and how the chains will be reconfigured.</p>
<p><strong>Labour</strong></p>
<p>If the financial market has found a way to preserve itself, the same does not apply to the labor market. According to sociologist Maria Aparecida Bridi, from the Federal University of Paraná, the health crisis caused by SARS-CoV-2 "has increased its fragility as it has been undergoing a rapid deterioration process in the last four years in Brazil."</p>
<p>In her article, she discusses the various aspects of the labor market scenario in the context of the pre-pandemic economic crisis, the indicators during the pandemic, and "the challenges imposed on unionism resulting from the intensification of the neoliberal agenda in the last four years."</p>
<p><strong>Agribusiness</strong></p>
<p>The scope and depth of the crisis resulting from the pandemic on agriculture and agribusiness in Brazil are discussed in the article written by Sergio Schneider, Abel Cassol, Alex Leonardi, and Marisson Marinho. They also look at the effects of the pandemic on family farming, the meat processing sector, and food distribution.</p>
<p>If, on the one hand, they point to the possibility of greater international insertion of Brazilian agribusiness, on the other hand they identify potential problems in domestic supply and possible price increases, as well as "food inflation, which results from both increased demand and production costs due to exchange devaluation, representing a stimulus to exports."</p>
<p>Food under the impact of SARS-CoV-2 is the subject of an article by three other researchers: Bernardete de Melo Franco, Mariza Landgraf, and Uelinton Manoel Pinto. The study is dedicated to answering whether food and its packaging can cause COVID-19, whether the industry and the food sector can be responsible for the spread of the virus, and what preventive measures consumers can take.</p>
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    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Mauro Bellesa.</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Agribusiness</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Journal</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Pandemic</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Covid-19</dc:subject>
    
    
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      <dc:subject>Music</dc:subject>
    
    
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    <dc:date>2020-07-08T17:40:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-99">
    <title>"Estudos Avançados" #99 presents dossier on the COVID-19 pandemic</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-99</link>
    <description> </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/capa-de-estudos-avancados-99" alt="Capa de &quot;Estudos Avançados&quot; 99" class="image-right" title="Capa de &quot;Estudos Avançados&quot; 99" /></p>
<p><span>Dedicated to the </span><span>COVID-19 </span><span>victims, the 99th </span><span>issue of the journal </span><i><a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/journal" class="external-link">Estudos Avançados</a></i><span> presents a dossier on the pandemic caused by the Sars-CoV-2 coronavirus. </span><span>The online version (Portuguese only) is available at </span><a class="external-link" href="https://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_issuetoc&amp;pid=0103-401420200002&amp;lng=pt&amp;nrm=iso">SciELO</a>.</p>
<p>According to sociologist <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/researchers/sergio-adorno" class="external-link">Sérgio Adorno</a>, editor of the publication, the object of the dossier is the complexity of the pandemic, reflected in the 17 articles written by 47 researchers from two dozen universities and research institutions in several Brazilian states.</p>
<p><span>"</span>Its multiple aspects are addressed by experienced researchers through extensive investigations, some of which are produced in the effervescence of events, in the seemingly uninterrupted search for scientific responses, and by government plans to stop its natural course, fertilized by unfavorable social and political conditions," notes the editor.</p>
<p>He points out that the pandemic is above all a public health problem, involving different types of collectives, which are represented, for example, by groups with different degrees of vulnerability<span>.</span></p>
<p><span>"</span>Not without reason, the dossier addresses issues more properly situated in this domain, such as the norms of international and national regulatory bodies, and the race for the discovery of vaccines, the performance of tests, and consequent epidemiological modeling that enable the assessment of both scenarios and guidelines for prevention."</p>
<p>However, the pandemic also reveals the harsh social reality, accentuated by the "acute process of economic recession that, in societies like Brazil, means the worsening of social inequalities that are projected with greater intensity in the metropolises, as is the case of São Paulo," says Adorno.</p>
<p>He reinforces that the space studies of the dossier demonstrate how inequalities affect the poorest, the black population, and the residents of neighborhoods where populations with low education and income predominate, "the most vulnerable to contamination and deaths" by COVID-19.</p>
<p>Other topics addressed by the dossier have been highlighted by Adorno, such as issues regarding the right to privacy in the face of intense data tracking and monitoring, the dangers of spreading Sars-Cov-2 in Brazilian biomes, and the absence of government policies<span> </span><span>capable of containing the pandemic's progress </span><span>in the country</span><span>.</span></p>
<p>The dossier begins with an article by the collaborator in the organization of the journal's set of texts, José da Rocha Carvalheiro, a professor of social medicine at USP's School of Medicine in Ribeirão Preto (FMRP) and a member of <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/research/research-groups/innovation-and-competitiveness-observatory" class="external-link">IEA's Innovation and Competitiveness Observatory</a>.</p>
<p>In the article, Carvalheiro states that COVID-19 in Brazil will not be a disease limited in time, but in space: "An endemic disease or, perhaps, a collection of endemic diseases with different characteristics spread across the national territory. Due to the diversity, the control proposals will inevitably have their own characteristics. This requires a coordination effort and political skill on the part of the leaders."</p>
<p>The effort of the journal to collaborate with the academic and public debate about COVID-19 and its consequences does not end in the current issue. Issue #100, to be launched in the next four months, will feature articles on the impact of the pandemic in areas such as <span>(national and international) </span><span>economy, international relations, education, labor market, agriculture, food, and engineering.</span></p>
<p><strong>Youth</strong></p>
<p>Another highlight of the issue is a set of articles on the Brazilian youth, a topic addressed <span>by </span><i>Estudos Avançados </i><span>for the first time</span><span>. Organized with the collaboration of Professor Marilia Pontes Sposito, from USP's School of Education (FE) and co-author of one of the articles, the section "Portrait of Youth" contains six texts written by a dozen education and sociology researchers from USP, the Federal University of ABC (UFABC), the Federal University of São Carlos (UFSCar), the Federal University of Ceará (UFC), the University of Brasília (UnB), </span><span>Pará State University (UEPA), UNISINOS, and the Federal University of Alfenas (UNIFAL).</span></p>
<p>According to Adorno, the section "deals with an issue that is always present in public debates: youth as a social matter." Despite the variety of topics covered, he identifies "t<span>he effort to review theses that seemed consolidated in the specialized literature </span><span>based on original investigations</span><span>" </span><span>as an axis that articulates all contributions.</span></p>
<p>With regard to the educational scope, there are articles on the participation of high school students in the institutional plan of schools (based on the results of research on the subject in urban centers in Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and Spain), the difficulties for schooling of the Brazilian youth that emerged since the 1990s, and what <span>the occupation of schools in Rio Grande do Sul in May and June 2016 has </span><span>represented for its protagonists.</span></p>
<p>The section also features articles on public performance through the Facebook profiles of young conservatives, youth cultural production on the outskirts of Fortaleza, and the policies and proposals for the professional training of young people and their insertion in the labour market in the last three decades.</p>
<p>The list below contains the names of the authors who have contributed with each one of the addressed themes:</p>
<p><strong>Covid-19 Pandemic</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong><i>José da Rocha Carvalheiro<br /></i><i>Cláudio Maierovitch Pessanha Henriques and Wa</i><i>gner Vasconcelos<br /></i><i>Paulo Marchiori Buss, Santiago Alcázar, and Luiz Augusto Galvão<br /></i><i>Glauco Arbix<br /></i><i>Carmen Phang Romero Casas, Julio Silva, Rodolfo Castro, Marcelo Ribeiro-Alves, and Carolina Mendes Franco<br /></i><i>Naomar de Almeida Filho<br /></i><i>Raul Borges Guimarães, Rafael de Castro Catão, Oséias da Silva Martinuci, Edmur Azevedo Pugliesi, and Patricia Sayuri Silvestre Matsumoto<br /></i><i>Marcos Silveira Buckeridge and Arlindo Philippi Jr.<br /></i><i>Vinicius Carvalho Jardim and Marcos Silveira Buckeridge<br /></i><i>Gabriela Capobianco Palhares, Alessandro Santiago dos Santos, Eduardo Altomare Ariente, and Jefferson de Oliveira Gomes<br /></i><i>André Luis Acosta, Fernando Xavier, Leonardo Suveges Moreira Chaves, Ester Cerdeira Sabino, Antonio Mauro Saraiva, and Maria Anice Murebe Sallum<br /></i><i>Sandra Caponi<br /></i><i>Márcia Pereira Alves dos Santos, Joilda Silva Nery, Emanuelle Freitas Goes, Alexandre da Silva, Andreia Beatriz Silva dos Santos, Luís Eduardo Batista, and Edna Maria de Araújo<br /></i><i>Eugênio Bucci<br /></i><i>Fernando Xavier, João Rodrigo Windischi Olenscki, André Luis Acosta, Maria Anice Mureb Sallum, and Antonio Mauro Saraiva<br /></i><i>Marcos Antônio Mattedi, Eduardo Augusto Werneck Ribeiro, Maiko Rafael Spiess, and Leandro Ludwig<br /></i><i>José Eli da Veiga</i></p>
<p><strong>Portrait of Youth</strong></p>
<p dir="ltr"><i>Marilia Pontes Sposito, Elmir de Almeida, and Felipe de Souza Tarábola<br /></i><i>Adriano Souza Senkevics and Marília Pinto de Carvalho<br /></i><i>Livia de Tommasi and Maria Carla Corrochano<br /></i><i>Glória Diógenes<br /></i><i>Wivian Weller and Lucélia de Moraes Braga Bassalo<br /></i><i>Luís Antonio Groppo and Rodrigo Manoel Dias da Silva</i></p>
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    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Mauro Bellesa.</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Literature</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Sustainable development</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Journal</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
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    <dc:date>2020-07-08T17:40:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
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  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-98">
    <title>"Estudos Avançados" #98 analyzes labor precariousness and transformations</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-issue-98</link>
    <description> </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/capa-de-estudos-avancados-98" alt="Capa de &quot;Estudos Avançados&quot; 98" class="image-right" title="Capa de &quot;Estudos Avançados&quot; 98" /></p>
<p>At a time of marked reduction in the possibility of work for a large number of workers as a result of restrictions on displacement and public contact due to the COVID-19 crisis, the <span>98th issue of the journal </span><i><a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/journal" class="external-link">Estudos Avançados</a></i><span>, released this month</span>, discusses two themes <span>already problematic </span>in Brazil before the pandemic: the still little recognition of care work, which is essential in view of the aging population, and the characteristics and impacts of new forms of work, including on workers' health. <span>The online version (Portuguese only) is available at </span><a class="external-link" href="https://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_issuetoc&amp;pid=0103-401420200001&amp;lng=pt&amp;nrm=iso">SciELO</a>.</p>
<p>The content of the issue was defined before the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the pandemic caused by the international spread of the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. Thus, rigorous analyses are not presented, as they could not have been produced in the early stages of the outbreak.</p>
<p>However, the issues addressed in the dossiers deserve extra attention as they are among those for which society must seek answers in the post-pandemic period in order to ensure decent and equal work for everyone, in addition to rights and health protection.</p>
<p>In "Work, Gender, and Care", the first dossier, care for people is analyzed in its various forms. An example is when care occurs as "help," without being characterized as a professional activity or as a parental obligation. The topic is discussed by sociologists Nadya Araujo Guimarães, a senior professor at USP's Faculty of Philosophy, Languages and Literature, and Human Sciences (FFLCH), and Priscila Pereira Faria Vieira, a researcher at the Brazilian Center of Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP).</p>
<p>Helena Hirata, former visiting professor at the IEA and director emeritus of research at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), addresses the main points of convergence and divergence in the activity of elderly caregivers in Brazil, Japan, and France, without neglecting the centrality of women in this work. The objective is to demonstrate how gender, race, and social class help to build the professional and personal trajectories of caregivers.</p>
<p>In the article "Care and Responsibility," Natacha Borgeaud-Garciandía discusses the work of immigrant caregivers for the elderly in Buenos Aires. A researcher at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO), Borgeaud-Garciandía focuses on responsibility as the assumption of a moral obligation towards a vulnerable person. One of the addressed aspects is the role of responsibility in the complexity of the <span>caregivers' </span>exploitation plots within the framework of unequal power relations.</p>
<p>The legal treatment of care in Brazil and public policies aimed at the socialization of social reproduction activities fall short of social demands, according to Regina Stela Corrêa Vieira, a researcher at CEBRAP and a professor of the graduate program in Law at the University of West Santa Catarina (UNOESC). To her, <span>labor law, which "historically ignores or neglects domestic work, whether paid or unpaid," has made some progress such as the Constitutional Amendment 72/2013 and the ratification of Convention C189 of the International Labor Organization (ILO), but currently sees labor reform as a "threat to the hard-won rights of domestic workers."</span></p>
<p>The struggle of these female workers for the enhancement of their professional activity is also analyzed in an article by Louisa Acciari, from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), and Tatiane Pinto, from the Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRRJ), who discuss informal negotiations with employers and union mobilization in the category. They propose a redefinition of the concept of work with the full inclusion of care work, something "indispensable to guarantee the dignity and equal rights."</p>
<p><strong>Labor precariousness</strong></p>
<p>The discussion on the lack of rights and dignity in the context of caregivers and domestic employees in general is extended in the second dossier of the isssue to address the characteristics and impacts of the transformations underway in the world of work, including health.</p>
<p>In his article, sanitary professional René Mendes, a collaborating researcher at the IEA, summarizes the concerns that led him to propose the development of the research project "Impacts of the New Morphologies of Contemporary Work on Life, Sickness, and Death."</p>
<p>Mendes starts from the perceptions of existing studies on the problem <span>mainly </span><span>carried out from a sociological perspective, but seeks to deepen the reflections on the nature and complexity of the pathogenesis mechanisms of the new morphologies of work on the workers' life and health </span><span>from the perspective of social epidemiology</span><span>.</span></p>
<p>One of these new forms of work is the "uberization," subject of the article by Ludmila Costhek Abílio, a researcher at the University of Campinas's Center for Union Studies and Labor Economics (CESIT-UNICAMP). Her study is based on empirical research with cosmetic dealers and motorcycle drivers, and on secondary data on Uber drivers and the so-called bike boys.</p>
<p>Abílio's analysis considers two theses: 1) uberization is an ongoing global trend to consolidate the worker as an available subordinate self-manager <span>defined as a just-in-time worker</span><span> devoid of guarantees and rights; 2) companies present themselves as mediators, when they actually operate forms of subordination and work control, in what can be called algorithmic work management.</span></p>
<p>The third article in the dossier, authored by <span>sociologist </span><span>Clemente Ganz Lúcio, a technician at the Inter-Union Department of Statistics and Socioeconomic Studies (DIEESE), presents a brief history and the current context of the debates </span><span>on union reform and the system of labor relations in the National Congress and in the Federal Government. </span>Lúcio points out that countless aspects of the world of work have undergone changes, such as jobs, occupations, labor dynamics, forms of hiring, working hours, and working conditions, among others.</p>
<p>For him, some guidelines should be considered in these changes. One of them is the development of an autonomous and effective system of self-regulation between workers and employers, which supports the union's restructuring of the labor relations system and resolves conflicts through instruments created by the parties.</p>
<p><strong>Bioeconomics, energy, and vegetation</strong></p>
<p>Themes related to the environment and sustainable development have had a regular presence throughout the journal's 33 years, and are present in this issue in three articles. André Luiz Willerding, a biotechnologist at the <span>Amazonas State Secretariat for Economic Development, Science, Technology, and Innovation (SEDECTI), and five other researchers from SEDECTI an </span>Amazonas State University<span>, present an overview of the state's reality regarding the development of bioeconomy strongly linked to the potential of natural resources. According to the authors, the discussion on this theme goes against the search for alternatives for the state's economy, still centralized around the Manaus Industrial Pole, which "becomes increasingly threatened year after year."</span></p>
<p>Another region addressed in this section is the Brazilian Northeast, in an article on the importance of integrating social, economic, and environmental policies around the supply of energy to the semiarid region. Based on the food-water-energy nexus, which seeks to examine the interrelationships of these three essential components of environmental and human quality, Marcel Burztyn, from <span>University of Brasília's</span><span> Center for Sustainable Development (CDS-UnB), proposes the promotion of photovoltaic energy generation by family farmers.</span></p>
<p>When studying issues such as the degree of complexity and diversification of the Brazilian landscape, it must be taken into account that a landscape may be the result of recent environmental changes or relics of much more remote conditions. This is what geologists Daniel Meira Arruda, from the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG), and Carlos Ernesto Gonçalves Rynaud Schaefer, from the Federal University of Viçosa (UFV), point out in another article. They discuss the biogeographic theories formulated and modified over the past 60 years of studies on the reconstruction of Brazil's vegetation under the impact of the climatic changes of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), which occurred 18,000 years ago. According to both researchers, the recent advance of global climate models has provided new perspectives for a more faithful reconstruction of the conditions of that period.</p>
<p><strong>Literature and other cultural themes</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong>The <span>"Culture" </span><span>section brings texts about works by writers Samuel Beckett, José de Alencar and Murilo Mendes, and about the costumes of the Brazilian Indians during the time of Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen's </span><span>government</span><span> (1637-1644) during the Dutch occupation in the country's Northeast. The set of articles also includes "The Impediments of Memory," by Jeanne Marie Gagnebin, and "Ideological Automata," by Benhur Bortolotto</span><i>.</i></p>
<p><i>Estudos Avançados</i> #98 also presents tributes for the ten years since the death of Portuguese writer José Saramago, winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Literature. There are three articles on some aspects of the author's work written by Jaime Bertoluci, Marcelo Lachat, and Jean-Pierre Chauvin.</p>
<p>Finally, the edition includes reviews of five books: "Reflection as Resistance: Homage to Alfredo Bosi," organized by Augusto Massi, Erwin Torralbo Gimenez, Marcus Vinicius Mazzari, and Murilo Marcondes de Moura; "The French School of Geography: a Contextual Approach," by Vincent Berdoulay; "The Double Night of Linden Trees," by Marcus Vinicius Mazzari; "Historia von D. Johann Fausten," translated, organized, and commented by Magali Moura; and "The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus," by Christopher Marlowe, with translation and notes by Luís Bueno and Caetano Waldrigues Galindo.</p>
<p>The list below contains the names of the authors who have contributed with each one of the addressed themes:</p>
<p><strong><span>Work, Gender, and Care</span></strong></p>
<p dir="ltr"><i>Nadya Araujo Guimarães and</i><i> Priscila Pereira Faria Vieira<br /></i><i>Helena Hirata<br /></i><i>Natacha Borgeaud-Garciandía<br /></i><i>Regina Stela Corrêa Vieira<br /></i><i>Louisa Acciari and Tatiane Pinto</i></p>
<p><strong>Labor Issues</strong></p>
<p dir="ltr"><i>René Mendes<br /></i><i>Ludmila Costhek Abílio<br /></i><i>Clemente Ganz Lúcio</i></p>
<p><strong>Environment and Development</strong></p>
<p dir="ltr"><i>André Luis Willerding, Leonardo Rodrigo </i><i>da Silva, Roseana Pereira da Silva, Geison </i><i>Maicon Oliveira de Assis, and Estevão Vicente Cavalcanti Monteiro de Paula<br /></i><i>Marcel Bursztyn<br /></i><i>Daniel Meira Arruda and</i><i> Carlos Ernesto Gonçalves Reynaud Schaefer</i></p>
<p dir="ltr"><strong>Culture</strong></p>
<p><i>Jeanne Marie Gagnebin<br /></i><i>Luciano Gatti<br /></i><i>Fabiano Lemos and Ulysses Pinheiro<br /></i><i>Pablo Simpson<br /></i><i>Aline Leal Fernandes Barbosa<br /></i><i>Benhur Bortolotto<br /></i><i>Fausto Viana</i></p>
<p dir="ltr"><strong>José Saramago: Themes and Languages</strong></p>
<p><i>J</i><i>aime Bertoluci<br /></i><i>Marcelo Lachat<br /></i><i>Jean Pierre Chauvin</i></p>
<p dir="ltr"><strong>Reviews</strong></p>
<p><i>Alexandre Koji Shiguehara<br /></i><i>Nilson Cortez Crocia de Barros<br /></i><i>Klaus F. W. Eggensperger<br /></i><i>Rafael Rocca dos Santos</i></p>
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    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Mauro Bellesa.</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Literature</dc:subject>
    
    
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    <dc:date>2020-05-08T17:40:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/how-becoming-sick-became-forbidden-expression-in-the-modern-world">
    <title>How becoming sick became a forbidden expression in the modern world</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/how-becoming-sick-became-forbidden-expression-in-the-modern-world</link>
    <description></description>
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<th><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/frederico-azevedo-da-costa-pinto" alt="Frederico Azevedo da Costa Pinto" class="image-inline" title="Frederico Azevedo da Costa Pinto" /></th>
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<p><strong>Frederico Azevedo da Costa Pinto, one of IEA's sabbatical researchers in 2017</strong></p>
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<p>As natural as demonstrating joy and sadness is the expression of being sick. Among the vast repertoire of animal manifestations, "sick behavior" - as it is called among specialists - is the demonstration of discouragement, prostration, lack of appetite and the will to do nothing. These are clear signs that animals emit when they do not want social contact because they are sick. "It is the way to give the body time to recover and even preserve the social group from getting sick. But this behavior is being increasingly repressed in modern societies by the way workers' productivity is viewed," says Professor <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/researchers/fred-pinto" class="external-link">Frederico Azevedo da Costa Pinto</a>, a specialist in experimental pathology and animal behavior, and participant in the <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/sabbatical/sabbatical-professors" class="external-link">IEA Sabbatical Year Program</a> in 2017.</p>
<p>With the research project "Modern Man: An Animal Socially Deprived of the Right to Become Sick," the pathologist will go through the historical evolution of how the behaviors of sick individuals used to be viewed and how this behavior has been perceived in modern societies. In parallel, he will search for data in the related literature on the expression of this behavior among humans, relating them to the behavior of experimental animals.</p>
<p>The historical evaluation will allow to confront changes in the working day with the productivity expectations of the modern worker, he believes.</p>
<p>If in modern societies becoming ill becomes prohibitive, the counterpoint to "camouflage" disease is the increasingly common use of medicines. "Expressing unhealthy behavior would incur absences at work and therefore we are encouraged to take medication, often self-medication, in order to maintain the expected work day. Associated with this is the fact that the <span>most prescribed and consumed </span>classes of drugs in modern societies are precisely the palliative medicines for pains, colds and allergies, for example," he says.</p>
<p>The project will evaluate investments in research and dissemination of drugs aimed at the temporary relief of the malaise of certain diseases. "They are medicines that do not necessarily shorten the course of the disease; nor do they actually improve health conditions," says Costa Pinto.</p>
<p>"Let's not be purists. Taking medicine helps you getting through illness without suffering. But this does not prevent the individual from also staying in comfort at home. In reality, what we are trying to discuss is the fact that the individual takes medication to force themselves to continue working," he says.</p>
<p>In addition, there is the problem of <span>excess</span> and self-medication. In some countries, legislation allows drugs to be offered on gondolas, making <span>access</span> easier. But there are health systems, as in Canada, for example, where there is no excess or self-medication because there is no such facility of access, he compares.</p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Culture and legislation</strong></p>
<p>Cultural differences also influence how the patient behaves. Even legislation can vary as a reflection of the cultural aspect, says the scientist. "Countries with more consistent social protection allow people to get sick, because the legislation provides for a longer sick leave. Even the longer maternity and paternity leave denote this kind of respect for the worker," he recalls.</p>
<p>On the contrary, countries that tend to work longer and with outsourced work place workers at increasingly absurd pressures, suppressing the individual's right to become ill, he says. "The right to get sick tends to become unacceptable in these societies, because they serve a logic that makes individuals expendable," he says.</p>
<p>But what is the problem in not allowing yourself to express the disease? "One of them, the most obvious one, is to take the disease to the social group, in the case of an individual who camouflages an infectious disease, for example," he says. Another problem in not manifesting the disease is the individual becoming increasingly subject to uncured diseases and that may have recurrences or become chronic. "We are talking about everyday diseases, not serious diseases. I have no doubt that not allowing yourself to fall ill will lead to a worse or incomplete recovery, since palliative medicines offer a momentary response to the symptoms of the disease," he says.</p>
<p>In addition, there are long-term emotional changes that seem to be associated with the fact that the person does not stop when they need to. "Not giving yourself this time can generate disorders, including psychological ones," says the pathologist.</p>
<p>All these cultural and legal aspects denote how much each society cares about the health of their citizens, he believes.</p>
<p><strong>Similarities</strong></p>
<p>We are more like animals than we imagine. Bizarre things that we assumed to be exclusive to humans have been observed among bugs. "For example, unplanned copulation, performed simply for the demonstration of power and hierarchical superiority. Hierarchy is key to understanding the behavior of getting sick. A senior executive and a doorman demonstrate different ways to get sick," he says.</p>
<p>The immune system has a lot to do with hierarchy, says the pathologist. "Some people do not demonstrate unhealthy behavior simply because they are more resilient, or because the hierarchical position in a company prevents it. They may not want to show vulnerability. Others do not express unhealthy behavior because they can not lose their jobs," he says.</p>
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<th><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/prurigo-nodularis-doenca-autoimune" alt="Prurigo nodularis doença autoimune" class="image-inline" title="Prurigo nodularis doença autoimune" /></th>
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<p class="kssattr-macro-title-field-view kssattr-templateId-kss_generic_macros kssattr-atfieldname-title documentFirstHeading" id="parent-fieldname-title"><strong>Prurigo nodularis, an autoimmune disease of unknown cause</strong></p>
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<p>More and more research projects show that things that happen in the nervous system have physical connections. This includes the immune response, which is a protective response to infections. The same response that prepares the body for an immediate response, such as running away from a thug, is also the kind of response that modulates immunity, he compares. "Stress, for example, is an adaptive protective response described 80 years ago that works with this same mechanism," he says.</p>
<p>Subordination and immune response in animals have been studied to also evaluate how a "submissive" animal behaves in face of the disease. A research model, which injects bacteria to simulate disease in a rat pair, showed that the subordinate animal's pressures were different from the dominant's pressures, he says. "In this case, the dominant is allowed to demonstrate disease. The subordinate lends attention to the dominant and <span>demonstrates </span>to be socially submissive <span>all the time</span>, without being concerned with manifesting the unhealthy behavior", compares the scientist.</p>
<p>The most positive effects expected of his research is that it can subsidize public policies, says the researcher. "In a country with social, economic and political problems, it is utopian to think <span>that these aspects of health are even considered. But in practice, I hope at the very least to raise a discussion about where industrial society is pushing the individual. It does not make sense to have an economy growing at the expense of the loss of individual freedom and the health of the individual. In fact, we need to rethink the culture of growth, industrialization, the consumer market, and profit. Growing up is a charge in all social groups and at all levels. But what grows without stopping is a tumor; is cancer," he says.</span></p>
<p style="text-align: right; "><span class="discreet">Images: Leonor Calasans; Michael Katotomichelakis, Dimitrios G Balatsouras, Konstantinos Bassioukas,<br />Nikolaos Kontogiannis, Konstantinos Simopoulos, Vassilios Danielides.</span></p>]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Sylvia Miguel.</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Cognition</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Public Health</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Humans</dc:subject>
    
    
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      <dc:subject>Sabbatical</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Cities</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2017-05-09T15:05:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-87">
    <title>New issue of 'Estudos Avançados' analyzes the Brazilian labour market</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/journal-87</link>
    <description></description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/capa-da-revista-estudos-avancados-87" alt="Capa da revista 'Estudos Avançados' 87" class="image-right" title="Capa da revista 'Estudos Avançados' 87" />"Labour Market" is the theme of the main dossier of the 87th issue of the journal "Estudos Avançados", to be released in the last week of August. The issue contains other two thematic sections: "Energy and Environment" and "Culture and Politics".</p>
<p><span><span>The dossier resumes the discussion on <span>unemployment </span>begun in a previous issue w</span>ith seven articles by historians, sociologists and economists. The opening article, by Alexandre de Freitas Barbosa, from USP's Institute of Brazilian Studies (IEB), outlines the general characteristics of the labour market formation process in Brazil. The panorama analyzed by Barbosa addresses the colonial period up to the end of the process of industrialization (1930-80).</span></p>
<p><span>The set of texts also analyzes specific issues such as labour in the Northeast of Brazil, the effects of economic recession, the reduction of social protection of workers and inequality in the gender division of labour.</span></p>
<p>The section "Energy and Environment" contains five articles on national energy programs and shows that "conviviality is not always easy to ecological ideals and growth policies," according to the journal's editor, Alfredo Bosi.</p>
<p>This second aspect is discussed in an article by Helena Margarido Moreira and Wagner Costa Ribeiro on the position of China in the negotiations on climate change. The authors comment that China seeks to ensure the principle of differentiated responsibilities and be classified as a developing country, avoiding compromising its domestic goals of economic development. The same section presents texts on the interaction of botany and geography with anthropological and environmental bodies.</p>
<p>The articles of the section "Culture and Politics" address controversial issues of social sciences today: multiculturalism seen from the universal and the particular dialectic perspective; the analysis of the June 2013 demonstrations in Brazil from the perspective of the political culture of consumption; the debate on the relationship between science, expertise and democracy; and the treatment given by the media to the Quotas Act. The section also brings a history of the 25 years of work of the <i>Escola de Governo</i> (School of Government), an institution dedicated to explain the working mechanism of political institutions and to cooperate with the correction of the course of the Brazilian political life, according to one of its founders, jurist Fábio Konder Comparato.</p>
<p><span>Texts that address the indigenous people Arara Karo, computational complexity, and books on Walter Benjamin and Haiti complete the issue.</span></p>
<p>The list below contains the names of the authors who have contributed with each one of the addressed themes:</p>
<p><strong>Labour market</strong></p>
<p><i><i>Alexandre de Freitas Barbosa</i><br /></i><i><i>Monica Duarte Dantas<br /></i></i><i><i>Vivian Chieregati Costa<br /><i>Roberto Véras de Oliveira<br /><i>Magda Barros Biavaschi<br /><i>José Alcides Figueiredo Santos<br />Luiz Vicente Fonseca Ribeiro<br /><i>Maria Cristina Cacciamali<br />Fabio Tatei<br /><i>Luana Passos de Souza<br />Dyeggo Rocha Guedes</i> </i></i></i></i></i></i></p>
<p><strong>Energy and Environment</strong></p>
<p><i><i>Edgar Antonio Perlotti<br />Edmilson Moutinho dos Santos<br />Hirdan Katarina de Medeiros Costa<br /></i><i>Marcilei Andrea Pezenatto Vignatti<br />Luiz Fernando Scheibe<br /></i></i><i><i>Maria Assunta Busato<br /><i>Antonio Salatino<br />Marcos Buckeridge<br /><i>Raquel Dezidério Souto<br /><i>Helena Margarido Moreira<br />Wagner Costa Ribeiro</i> </i></i></i></i></p>
<p><span><strong>Culture and Politics</strong></span></p>
<p><i><i>Celso Frederico</i><br /></i><i><i>Isleide Fontenelle</i><br /></i><i><i>Maya Mitre</i><br /></i><i><i>Maria Salete Magnoni</i><br /></i><i>Fábio Konder Comparato</i></p>
<p><span><strong>Indigenism</strong></span></p>
<p><span> </span><i>Betty Mindlin</i></p>
<p><span> </span></p>
<p><strong><span> </span><span>Computation</span></strong></p>
<p><strong><span> </span></strong><i>José Roberto Castilho Piqueir</i><span>a</span></p>
<p><span> </span></p>
<p><strong><span> </span><span>Reviews</span></strong></p>
<p><strong><span> </span></strong><i>Fabio Mascaro Querido<br /></i><span><i>Cristine Koehler Zanella</i></span></p>
<p><span> </span></p>]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Mauro Bellesa.</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Energy</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Environment</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Culture</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Politics</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Social Sciences</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Journal</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2016-08-15T21:20:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/francisco-zapata-discusses-mexicos-development-models">
    <title>Francisco Zapata Discusses Mexico’s Development Models</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/francisco-zapata-discusses-mexicos-development-models</link>
    <description></description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<table class="tabela-direita">
<tbody>
<tr>
<th><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/imagens/home-francisco-zapata" alt="Francisco Zapata" class="image-right" title="Francisco Zapata" /></th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td style="text-align: right; "><strong>Chilean sociologist Francisco Zapata</strong></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>Sociologist Francisco Zapata, a professor and researcher at the Center of Sociological Studies of El Colegio de México, will be at the IEA-USP on <strong>June 9 and 11</strong>, when he will give two conferences on the relations between development models and the transformations of Mexican society.</p>
<p class="Text"><span>Organized by the IEA in partnership with El Colegio de México, the two meetings will take place at 2 pm, at IEA-USP’s Events Room.</span></p>
<p class="Text"><span>On June 9, the theme will be <i>Tiempos Neoliberales in Mexico </i>[<i>Neoliberal Times in Mexico</i>]. Zapata will discuss the flourishing of Neoliberalism and the resulting changes in the country’s labor market. The exposition will address particularly the 1982-2013 period, characterized by the transition from an industrialization model based on the replacement of imports to the transnationalization of the domestic market, and from a corporatist model of political domination to a democratic one. The discussant will be philosopher Reginaldo Moraes, professor at UNICAMP’s Institute of Philosophy and Human Sciences, and the event will be moderated by sociologist Iram Rodrigues, professor at USP’s School of Economics, Administration and Accounting (FEA).</span></p>
<p class="Text">At the June 11 conference, Zapata will discuss <i>Ciencias Sociales y Desarrollo Nacional en Mexico</i> [<i>Social Sciences and National Development in Mexico</i>]. He will review the various stages of the relationship between the social sciences and the type of national development promoted by the Mexican State, focusing on the political, economic and social transformations that took place as Mexican society established itself. The discussant will be sociologist <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/persons/visiting-professors/bernardo-sorj-1" class="external-link">Bernardo Sorj</a>, visiting professor at the IEA.</p>
<p><strong>The Lecturer</strong></p>
<p>Francisco Zapata graduated in Sociology from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, and earned a doctorate in Sociology from the École Pratique des Hautes Etudes (France). He has been visiting professor at several universities around the world, including Yale and Notre Dame, both in the United States. He is currently a professor and researcher at the Center of Sociological Studies of El Colegio de México, where he studies trade union movements, labor relations and regional development in the Latin American context. His most recent books are <i>Historia mínima del sindicalismo latinoamericano</i>, published by El Colegio de México (2013), and <i>Hacia una sociología latinoamericana del trabajo</i>, published by Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán (2010).</p>]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Original version in Portuguese by Flávia Dourado and translation by Carlos Malferrari</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>El Colegio de México</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Sociology</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>México</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2015-05-29T19:20:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/media-library/photos/events-2014/modernidades-multiplas-e-as-metamorfoses-da-etica-do-trabalho-tardes-cariocas-a-usp-ouve-o-rio-de-janeiro-04-de-agosto-de-2014">
    <title>Carioca Afternoons: USP Listens to Rio de Janeiro - Multiple Modernities and the Metamorphoses of the Work Ethics in Brazil - August 4, 2014</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/media-library/photos/events-2014/modernidades-multiplas-e-as-metamorfoses-da-etica-do-trabalho-tardes-cariocas-a-usp-ouve-o-rio-de-janeiro-04-de-agosto-de-2014</link>
    <description></description>
    
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Richard Meckien</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Sociology</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Commons</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Ethics</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Social Sciences</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2014-08-04T03:00:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Pasta</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/work-ethics-in-brazil">
    <title>Adalberto Cardoso examines the metamorphoses of the work ethics in Brazil</title>
    <link>https://www.iea.usp.br/en/news/work-ethics-in-brazil</link>
    <description></description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<table class="tabela-direita-300">
<tbody>
<tr>
<th><img src="https://www.iea.usp.br/en/images/adalberto-moreira-cardoso" alt="Adalberto Moreira Cardoso" class="image-inline" title="Adalberto Moreira Cardoso" /></th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td style="text-align: right; "><b>Sociologist Adalberto Cardoso</b></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>Diverse aspects of how the work ethics was built in Brazil will be discussed by sociologist Adalberto Cardoso, from the Institute of Social and Political Studies (Iesp) at Rio de Janeiro State University (Uerj), during the speech <i>Multiple Modernities and the Metamorphoses of the Work Ethics in Brazil</i>, on August 4, at 3 pm (GMT -3), in the Faculty Room of the Institute of International Relations (IRI). It will be the third event of the cycle <i>Carioca Afternoons: The University of São Paulo Listens to Rio de Janeiro</i>.</p>
<p class="Sub1"><b>PROTESTANTISM</b></p>
<p>Cardoso notes that Protestant ethics and its links with the spirit of capitalism hold methodical work in high regard and, in keeping with good morals, advocate sacrificing the satisfaction of immediate needs for the sake of greater well-being in the future. He adds that Protestant ethics also see rewards as the result of exercising a “properly understood vocation.” Thus, “entrepreneurship, individualism, and rewards for merit and hard work have replaced the idea of ​​vocation in the bourgeois work ethic.”</p>
<p class="Sub1"><b>SOCIALISM</b></p>
<p>The sociologist points out that an alternative work ethics has been built by organized labor in mutual support societies, labor unions and, later, political parties. This other ethics is based on “solidarity and class equality, avoiding the notion of merit and its religious justification. Its principle of justice is the socialist maxim, ‘From each according to his ability, to each according to his need,’ a principle that is possible only in the affluent society of the communist utopia.”</p>
<p class="Sub1"><b>BRAZIL</b></p>
<p>Cardoso emphasizes that, in Brazil, the main element in the building of a work ethics was slavery, which determined the country’s social relations for centuries, giving rise to the notion of manual labor as something degrading and undignified: “Redeeming manual labor from the stigma of unworthiness took decades, and neither bourgeois ethics nor its egalitarian counterpart became essential part of the expectations of Brazilian workers throughout history.” It is over this background sociologist will discuss the construction of Brazil’s work ethics (or, perhaps, its plural work ethics).</p>
<p class="Sub1"><b>PROFILE</b></p>
<p>In addition to being a professor and researcher at Iesp-Uerj, where he heads the Center for Labor Research and Studies (Nupet), Cardoso is an associate researcher at the Brazilian Center for Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP) and at the Warwick Institute for Employment Research Scientist, as well as grant scholar of Faperj’s “Scientist from our State” program<span style="text-decoration: underline;">.</span></p>
<p class="Text">With a doctor’s degree in Sociology from USP’s School of Philosophy, Letters and Human Sciences (FFLCH), he is the author of 14 books and over 70 articles published in journals and books. He currently coordinates three research projects and works in various fields of labor sociology, urban sociology (including social inequalities) and social theory. The keywords of his <a class="external-link" href="http://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K4786334H1">Lattes résumé</a> that contextualize his academic production are unionism, class formation, labor market, productive restructuring, globalization, automotive industry, labor law, neo-liberalism, democracy, Latin America, and Vargas Era.</p>
<p class="Sub1"><b>CYCLE</b></p>
<p>The cycle “Rio Afternoons: The University of São Paulo Listens to Rio de Janeiro” invites prominent social scientists from Rio de Janeiro to discuss various aspects of Brazilian reality, in an effort to bring together scholarly reflections on social issues from Brazil’s the two major cities. The cycle is organized by Renato Janine Ribeiro, professor of Ethics and Political Philosophy at the FFLCH-USP and coordinator of the IEA-USP’s <i>Research Group on The Future Questions Us</i>.</p>
<p class="Text">The event is open to the public and admission is free. For information and registration, please send a message to <a class="mail-link" href="mailto:leila.costa@usp.br">leila.costa@usp.br</a>. The event will also be broadcast live <a href="https://www.iea.usp.br/aovivo" class="external-link">on the Web</a>. IRI-USP is located at Av. Professor Martins Rodrigues, Travessas 4 e 5, Cidade Universitária, São Paulo, SP (<a class="external-link" href="http://www.iri.usp.br/index.php?option=com_k2&amp;view=item&amp;layout=item&amp;id=414&amp;Itemid=353">map</a>).</p>
<p class="Text" style="text-align: right; "><span style="text-align: right; "><span class="discreet">English revision by Carlos Malferrari - Photo: Fiocruz</span></span></p>]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>Mauro Bellesa</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Carlos Malferrari (translator)</dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Sociology</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Work</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Commons</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Ethics</dc:subject>
    
    
      <dc:subject>Social Sciences</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2014-07-24T00:50:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Notícia</dc:type>
  </item>




</rdf:RDF>
