|

Table
of contents
Preface
Dom
Pedro
Casaldáliga
Introduction
I.
Human Rights in the Countryside
Violence
and Social Movement Activism in the Countryside
Antonio Canuto
10
years since the Eldorado dos Carajás massacre - rural
movements fight against impunity
Evanize Sydow
Prophecies
do not change the future
Aton Fon Filho
Agrarian
Policy in the Lula Government: the Hollowing of Agrarian
Reform
Jose Juliano de Carvalho Filho
Peasant
Agriculture and Agrarian Reform in Brazil:
an Evaluation of the Lula Government
Via Campesina Brazil, The Movement of Small Farmers, The
Landless Workers Movement, The Movement of Dam Affected
Peoples, The Movement of Peasant Women, The Pastoral Land
Commission, The Brazilian Association for Land Reform
Labor
rights violations and death of sugarcane workers
Maria Aparecida de Moraes Silva
Slavery
in Brazil: New and Persistent Issues
Ricardo Rezende Figueira
Violence
Against Indigenous Peoples
Paulo Maldos
The United Nations confirms the denunciations of the
Movement of Dam-Affected People
Leandro Gaspar Scalabrin
Diversion
of the São Francisco River: A contradiction to the human
right to water
Roberto
Malvezzi
The state of Bahia suffers from the impacts of uranium
production for nuclear plants
Zoraide Villasboas
Peasant
Resistance in Brazil
Mônica
Dias Martins
II.
Human Rights in Urban Areas
They
did not see the Brazilian soccer team get defeated
Aton Fon Filho
Violence
in São Paulo – a frightening balance
Evanize Sydow
Structural
Unemployment in Brazil
Marcio Pochmann
Migration
and Slave Work
Luiz
Bassegio e Luciane Udovic
Human
trafficking in Brazil
Marcia Anita Sprandel
Labor
Policies and Human Rights
Paulo
César Pedrini
III.
Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
Towards
a Country for All People
Lúcia Xavier
Limits
to Access to Education
Sérgio
Haddad e Mariângela Graciano
Amazon
dilemmas and the Lula administration
Lindomar Silva
The
Right to Culture: Progress and dilemmas facing Lula’s
Government in regards to cultural policies
Antonio Eleilson Leite
The
Human Right to Communication: its recognition grows, but
violations remain the rule
Diogo
Moyses e Cristina Charão
IV.
International Policy and Human Rights
The Peoples’ Victory at the WTO
Maria Luisa Mendonça
Evaluation
of the World Bank’s Rural Programs in Brazil
Maria Luisa Mendonça
With
the help of the United States, the Paraguayan government
represses social movements
Igor Ojeda
Foreign
Debt and Human Rights Violations in Brazil
Maria
Lucia Fattorelli Carneiro
|