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Economic Lirowth and Human Rights in Brazil: The First Nine Years of Military Tutelage

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2017

Abstract

This is an interim, summary and provisional judgment on the Brazilian experiment of the past nine years, that is, since the military took power on April 1, 1964. To try to give an impression of the results of the interaction among the values of political democracy, equality, and economic growth, and the present levels compared with those of 1964 as well as what appear to be the trends. I have chosen six “indicators”:

  1. (1) the autonomy and integrity of the legal system;

  2. (2) torture and police brutality;

  3. (3) freedom of the mass media;

  4. (4) income distribution patterns;

  5. (5) education distribution patterns; and

  6. (6) the quality of life of the people of the city of greater São Paulo.

Type
Economic Development and Human Rights: Brazil, Chile, and Cuba
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1973

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Footnotes

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American University.