4 research outputs found

    Brazil's landless movement and rights 'from below'

    Get PDF
    Recent literature has recognised the value of food sovereignty and human rights frameworks in agrarian struggles. Relatively little attention has gone toward how agrarian movements develop and apply their own rights discourses to further demands for social justice. This study considers Brazil's landless movement (MST) between 1984 and 1995, revealing three distinct rights discourses that recruited and mobilised protest by linking local issues to the movement's broader political project. The findings illustrate the value of rights, frames and ideology as analytical tools, shedding light on how movement-generated rights emerge through processes of reflexivity and in response to dynamic social-political contexts

    Massacre de Eldorados dos Carajás (1996)

    No full text
    Edição do Jornal dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra com matéria especial sobre o massacre de Eldorado dos Carajás
    corecore