Skip to Main Content
Brown University
Brown University

Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies

Search

Site Navigation

  • Home
  • About
    • Director's Letter
    • People
    • Annual Reports
    • Partnerships
  • Research
    • Core Research
    • Seed Grants
    • Affiliated Faculty Research
    • Publications
  • Programs
    • Civil-Military Humanitarian Coordination
  • Opportunities
    • For Students
    • For Faculty
  • Education
    • Core Training
    • Courses
    • Hack for Humanity
    • Student Clinic for Immigrant Justice (SCIJ)
    • Training Seed Grants
    • Student Internships
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Event Archive
    • Webcasts
  • News
    • Current Emergencies
    • In the News
    • Community Spotlight
Search
Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies

Monitoring the Threats to Democracy in Brazil: A Challenge for Scholars

Breadcrumb

  • Home
  • Research
  • Affiliated Faculty Research

Brown Faculty: James Green

Resources: Website

Through a Brown University Humanities Research Fund grant, James Green is coordinating an effort to help U.S. and international scholars accompany the situation in Brazil since the recent election of Jair Bolsonaro to the presidency. With the support of Portuguese and Brazilian Studies graduate student Marina Adams, they are building a website that will be a clearing house in English for information about contemporary Brazil that can be a resource for academics in the social sciences and humanities who want to receive information about the changes taking place there.

The website, entitled the U.S. Observatory for Democracy in Brazil, will address a variety of issues including academic freedom; Afro-Brazilians; women; LGBT+; environment and Brazilian forests; land and rural labor; indigenous peoples; and urban social movements. This project is being developed in conjunction with the Human Rights and Academic Freedom Committee of the Brazilian Studies Association (BRASA) and the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. They currently have 35 affiliated U.S.-based human rights groups of Brazilians and friends of Brazil, as well as 1,500 people at 235 U.S. colleges and universities in 45 states collaborating with our efforts. Another way that they are disseminating this work is through presenting papers about the project at different professional organizations, including the Association of European Brazilianists (ABRE), the Brazilian Studies Association, and the Brazilian Historical Association (ANPUH), as well as in presentations at Brazilian universities, including the Federal University of Pernambuco, the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, the State University of Rio de Janeiro, and the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte.

Brown University
Providence RI 02912 401-863-1000

Quick Navigation

  • Visit Brown
  • Campus Map
  • A to Z
  • Contact Us

Footer Navigation

  • News
  • Events
  • Campus Safety
  • Accessibility
  • Jobs at Watson
Give To Brown

© Brown University

Brown University
Search

Mobile Site Navigation

    Mobile Site Navigation

    • Home
    • About
      • Director's Letter
      • People
      • Annual Reports
      • Partnerships
    • Research
      • Core Research
      • Seed Grants
      • Affiliated Faculty Research
      • Publications
    • Programs
      • Civil-Military Humanitarian Coordination
    • Opportunities
      • For Students
      • For Faculty
    • Education
      • Core Training
      • Courses
      • Hack for Humanity
      • Student Clinic for Immigrant Justice (SCIJ)
      • Training Seed Grants
      • Student Internships
    • Events
      • Upcoming Events
      • Event Archive
      • Webcasts
    • News
      • Current Emergencies
      • In the News
      • Community Spotlight
All of Brown.edu People
Advanced Search
Close Search

Monitoring the Threats to Democracy in Brazil: A Challenge for Scholars