Fifth Minister About to Fall Due to Corruption

Some ten months after taking office, President Dilma Rousseff should soon receive a fifth Minister’s resignation due to allegations of corruption. The Minister of Sport, Orlando Silva, from the PCdoB (Communist Party of Brazil), is under scrutiny for his role in a corruption scheme whereby NGOs received contracts from the Ministry in return for kickbacks Read more about Fifth Minister About to Fall Due to Corruption[…]

Crime Rates in Brazil– Grim Stats

The newspaper Globo reported some stark statistics today about how crime affects city-dwellers. According to the report undertaken by the National Confederation of Industry, “A Portrait of Brazilian Society: Public Security,” within the last twelve months more than 51% of Brazilians give public safety a failing grade; 79% say they have witnessed or experienced some Read more about Crime Rates in Brazil– Grim Stats[…]

Brazil’s Banks: Record Profits and Striking Employees—What Gives?

Few other countries can boast banks whose profits were more fabulous than Brazil’s in 2010. As much of the world’s banks cowered under the threat that consumer and national debts might lead to insolvency, Brazil’s banks boomed.  According to the Economist, the sector enjoyed returns on equity of more than 25 percent, and the nation’s Read more about Brazil’s Banks: Record Profits and Striking Employees—What Gives?[…]

Today is International Right-to-Know Day

Today is International Right to Information Day. Countries around the world are celebrating their newfound right to ask and receive public information held, for the benefit of citizens, in the government’s trust. The New Paradigm– Freedom of Information and Open Government More than 40 of the world’s 90-odd national freedom of information (FOI) laws were Read more about Today is International Right-to-Know Day[…]

Brazil’s Unmerited Swagger

Mighty Brazil A couple of weeks ago, Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega puffed out his chest and idly suggested that the BRIC countries might bail out Europe. A few weeks later, Dilma Rousseff stood before the United Nations Assembly and tossed daggers at economic mismanagement in the U.S. and Europe while at once highlighting Brazil’s Read more about Brazil’s Unmerited Swagger[…]

Corruption in Brazil Today: Showdowns on Multiple Fronts

It is a pivotal moment for Brazil. While President Dilma Rousseff presents Brazil’s plans for the Open Government Partnership in New York today, anti-corruption movements are mobilizing across Brazil. Today, the Globo newspaper reported that around 30,000 protesters have come together through Facebook for a protest in Rio de Janeiro to be held between 17:00 Read more about Corruption in Brazil Today: Showdowns on Multiple Fronts[…]

Brazil’s Plans for the Open Government Partnership and 5 Recommendations

Brazil unveiled tentative plans to make good on the Open Government Partnership (OGP), a multi-country, multi-stakeholder international initiative to advance greater transparency, openness, accountability, and participation in government. Brazil and the U.S. are the Co-Chairs of the OGP, which is to be announced on September 20th by President Barack Obama at the opening of the Read more about Brazil’s Plans for the Open Government Partnership and 5 Recommendations[…]

Movements Against Corruption Afoot in Brazil

The performance of Brazil’s Congress, and particularly the governing coalition makes one wonder whether the nation’s deliberative process should be moved somewhere else— far away from the alleged ‘representatives of the people.’ Congress is where the government’s coalition ‘allies’ select their robber baron cabinet ministers, the same ones that have been resigning one after the Read more about Movements Against Corruption Afoot in Brazil[…]

Brazil’s Long-Awaited Freedom of Information Bill Once Again Under Threat

Brazil’s long-awaited freedom of information law is once again under threat. Senator and disgraced ex-President Fernando Collor, who was impeached in 1992 by the very Senate he now serves, has proposed radical revisions to the freedom of information bill 41/2010. These changes constitute a clear affront to President Dilma Rousseff, who has supported passage of Read more about Brazil’s Long-Awaited Freedom of Information Bill Once Again Under Threat[…]

Why Don’t Brazilians React?

The Fateful Question of El País Correspondent Juan Arias Search for the question “por que os brasileiros não reagem?” (Why don’t Brazilians react?) or the phrase, “do Brazilians really not know how to react to hypocrisy and their leaders’ lack of ethics?” (“Será que os brasileiros não sabem reagir à hipocrisia e à falta de Read more about Why Don’t Brazilians React?[…]