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Brazil

An exception to Lula’s rule by Sue Branford (March 2009)
The movement of landless workers in Brazil is unique in resisting co-option by the Lula government and has retained an impressive self-reliance and independent politics. For Sue Branford it is a beacon for the left worldwide. Here she explains why
Tropical Blair or Axis of Hope? by Hilary Wainwright (December 2006)
Hilary Wainwright returns from Sao Paulo to report on how social movements are preparing for President Lula’s second term
Through gritted teeth by Sue Branford (October 2006)
The former head of Brazil’s biggest development bank says the government is ‘practising the most brutal policy of wealth and income concentration on the planet’. So what does it mean for the onetime hope of the left, President Lula, in this month’s election?
Carbon credits and the green desert by Heidi Bachram (September 2006)
As the struggle for land and water resources in Brazil intensifies, Heidi Bachram discovers that the new carbon market is an added burden for vulnerable communities.
Lula’s lament by Hilary Wainwright (October 2005)
The success of the Brazilian Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), or Workers Party, acted as a beacon to the left worldwide. Now it has been revealed that it was governing on the basis of systematic corruption. Hilary Wainwright reports on how the quest for power perverted the PT and subverted democracy
Forget about Lula? by Sue Branford, Alfredo Saad-Filho (December 2004)
Brazilian president Luiz Inacio ’Lula’ da Silva has failed to implement the radical reforms expected in the wake of his 2002 election victory. So what went wrong? Should Lula’s Workers’ Party no longer be thought of as a left-wing force? And where does Brazil go from here? Alfredo Saad-Filho and Sue Branford discuss
Lula critics expelled from Brazilian Workers Party by Sue Branford (February 2004)
When Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva addressed January’s Summit of the Americas in Monterrey, Mexico, his words were music to activist ears. Neo-liberalism, he said, was "a perverse model that mistakenly separates the economic from the social, stability from growth, responsibility from justice". "We in Brazil have begun the war against hunger," he continued. "The starving cannot wait."
UK campaigners join Amazon battle by Jan Goodey (February 2004)
An international tribal rights group is calling on the Brazilian government to take a stand against corrupt local politicians and Western businesses following the kidnap of three Catholic missionaries who supported indigenous Indians in the northern Amazon.
Crunch time for Lula by Sue Branford (October 2003)
"We are following the example given to us by Lula," said Joao Paulo Rodrigues - one of the leaders of Brazil’s powerful Landless Movement (MST). "He taught us how to organise the people and to struggle. He is our reference point." Rodrigues was addressing thousands of people marching for agrarian reform in Pontal do Paranapanema, a huge area of disputed land to the extreme west of the state of Sao Paulo. He was defending the MST against accusations of "lawlessness" made by enraged landowners.
New dawn in Brazil by Marcos Arruda (December 2002)
By electing Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva with a huge majority, the Brazilian people have overwhelmingly rejected the "Washington consensus" and given a huge boost to Latin America’s burgeoning emancipatory movement.
 

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