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Brazilian Bourgeoisie and Foreign Policy: Studies in Critical Social Sciences / New Scholarship in Political Economy, cartea 241/22

Autor Tatiana Berringer Traducere de Martin Charles Nicholl
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 mar 2023
What were the changes in the international position of the Brazilian state during the Lula and Cardoso administrations? How were the classes and class fractions represented? These are the questions that Tatiana Berringer's work seeks to answer. Using the theoretical instruments of the Marxist Nicos Poulantzas, the book identifies the class interests that directed the international action of the Brazilian state. With notable originality, the text presents, theoretically and empirically, a truly consistent Marxist analysis of Brazilian foreign policy, as well as a rich interpretation of the class struggle in current Brazilian politics. The author offers the reader her reflections on the political crisis of 2016 and the foreign policy of the Dilma, Temer, and Bolsonaro governments.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004532687
ISBN-10: 9004532684
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Critical Social Sciences / New Scholarship in Political Economy


Notă biografică

Tatiana Berringer is Assistant Professor of International Relations at Federal University of ABC (Brazil). She is a member of the editorial board of Crítica Marxista (Brazil) and of the Brazilian Foreign Policy and International Insertion Observatory (opep.org). She coordinates the Social Classes and Foreign Policy Group Research (CNPQ).

Cuprins

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgements

List of Figures and Tables

Abbreviations and Acronyms

Introduction

1Power Bloc: Brazilian Theory and Policy
1 Theory: The Power Bloc and International Relations

2 Theory: Power Bloc and Foreign Policy Analysis


2The fhc Governments: Neoliberalism, Power Bloc and Foreign Policy
1 Neoliberalism

2 Neoliberalism and the Power Bloc in Brazil

3 Foreign Policy in the fhc Governments
3.1Adherence to the Missile Technology Control Regime (mtcr)

3.2The Efforts to Reactivate the InterAmerican Treaty for Reciprocal Assistance (itra)

3.3ftaa, mercosur and the Internal Bourgeoisie

3.4Regional Politics between 1998 and 2000: The mercosur Crisis and the Launching of the irsa i

3.5The Lafer Administration and the Brazilian State’s Passive Subordination to Imperialism

3.6The 2002 Elections

3.7The ftaa and the 2002 Elections

3.8The Internal Bourgeoisie and the 2002 Election

3.9The pt and the 2002 Elections


3The Lula Governments: Neo-developmentalism, Power Bloc and Foreign Policy
1 Neo-developmentalism and Power Bloc
1.1A Brief Review of Some of the Analytical Literature on the Lula Governments’ Social and Economic Policies


2 Foreign Policy during the Lula Governments
2.1South-South Coalitions

2.2Haiti

2.3Regional Integration

2.4Africa

2.5The Middle East

2.6China

2.7European Union

2.8The imf

2.9The United States

2.10Defense Policy

2.11The Lula Governments’ Foreign Policy and the Neo-developmentalist Front

2.12The Brazilian State’s Position in Regard to Imperialism

2.13The Political Organization of the Neo-developmentalist Front

2.14The Internal Bourgeoisie and the South-South Foreign Policy

2.15Contradictions among Sectors Composing the Internal Bourgeoisie

2.16The Unstable Equilibrium of Compromises and Foreign Policy

2.17The Party-Political Dispute and Foreign Policy


4Brazil and South America
1 Brazilian State and South America: Imperialism, Sub-imperialism and Neo-developmentalism
1.1Brazilian Imperialism

1.2Brazilian Sub-imperialism

1.3Neo-developmentalism and Regional Politics


2 People’s Movements and Unionism in Relation to Regional Integration Processes in South America
2.1Brazilian People’s Movements and Unionism and Regional Integration in the 1980s and 1990s

2.2The People’s Classes and Regional Integration during the pt Governments


5Brazil under fhc and Lula

6Power Bloc and Foreign Policy in the Dilma, Temer and Bolsonaro Governments
1 The Dilma Government: Foreign Policy, Political Crisis and Power Bloc
1.1Foreign Policy in the Dilma Governments

1.2The Power Bloc, the Political Crisis and Foreign Policy


2 The Temer Government and the Return to Passive Subordination
2.1Brazil’s Trade and Production Structures Compared with the World

2.2The Brazilian State’s Re-embracing of Passive Subordination

2.3Decadent External Insertion and Dependent Productive Structure

2.4‘Weak Meat’


3 The Bolsonaro Government and Its Explicit Passive Subordination to Imperialism: The Neofascist Alliance
3.1Foreign Policies of the Bolsonaro Government and the Trump Government: The Neofascist Alliance

3.2A New Stage in Brazil-USA Relations: The Biden Government


References

Index