This book identifies 2 polarising concepts used by Brazilian mainstream sociology to explain the formation and identity of Brazil as a society: corruption and human rights.

As the 1988 Constitution is a milestone in the Brazilian transition to democracy and part of a broader movement of Brazil's integration into international law, the impact of international legal regimes on the attainment of human rights and the fight against corruption is analysed to evaluate the state of Brazilian democracy.

The book examines the outcomes of 4 specific international human rights regimes in Brazil, involving rights and policies related to:
– the right to food, the fight against hunger, and conditional cash transfer programmes;
– the right to health and the public healthcare system;
– the right to racial equality and affirmative action in superior education; and
– the right to recognition and the protection of Indigenous populations.

This approach is then applied to the examination of the international anti-corruption agenda. It focuses on Brazil’s determination to deal with corruption against the backdrop of its worst democratic crisis of the last 35 years using meticulously researched case studies on the most prominent investigations, including Mensalão and Lava Jato (Car Wash). The book traces back to the origins of the international anti-corruption agenda and key legitimising efforts aimed at aligning the discourses with the developmental, good-governance trends, and delves into its repercussions within the Brazilian context, with a glance at their collateral effects in other parts of the world.

Thus, the core focus of the work revolves around human rights and the fight against corruption, shedding light on how democracy evolves or recedes over time under their influence.

Les mer
Considers the constitutional consequences of Brazil’s determination to deal with corruption against the backdrop of its worst democratic crisis of the last 35 years.

Introduction
1. Democracy and Political Legitimisation in Global Society
2. International Human Rights and Democracy in Brazil: Contributions to the Democratic Consolidation
3. Human Rights, Corruption, and the International Regime Antidote
4. The Fight against Corruption: From Societal Engagement to Social Poisoning
5. The Brazilian Anti-Corruption Push and Democracy Around the World
Conclusion: Closing Pandora's Box without Trapping Hope Inside

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Considers the constitutional consequences of Brazil’s determination to deal with corruption against the backdrop of its worst democratic crisis of the last 35 years.
Considers one of the world’s most renowned anti-corruption probes, Operation Car Wash (Lava Jato) in Brazil
The Constitutionalism in Latin America and the Caribbean series publishes outstanding scholarship on the law and politics of the many varieties of constitutionalism in Latin America and the Caribbean. From single-jurisdiction and cross-national studies to inquiries into the relationship between constitutional and international law in multilevel legal orders in the region, the series welcomes submissions that identify, contextualise, illuminate, and theorise the origins, challenges, foundations, and future of constitutional law and politics in these understudied—but fascinating and important—parts of the world. Scholarship published in this series covers the range of methodologies in law and politics, including but not limited to comparative, doctrinal, empirical, historical, and theoretical perspectives. The series editors invite preliminary inquiries as well as full proposals for monographs and edited volumes in what aims to be the leading forum for the publication of exceptional public law scholarship on Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781509981977
Publisert
2025-02-20
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
473 gr
Høyde
238 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
P, U, 06, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
216

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Lucas Delgado is Judicial Analyst at the Brazilian Council of Justice, Brazil.