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Posts by André S. Bailão

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Brazil's Supreme Court forms a majority to convict ex-President Bolsonaro of a coup A historic conviction: Brazil's Supreme Court delivers a majority vote to convict former President Jair Bolsonaro over a plot to overthrow the government.

JUST IN:
A historic conviction: Brazil's Supreme Court delivers a majority vote to convict former President Jair Bolsonaro over a plot to overthrow the government.

7 months ago 4763 1198 219 293

"Delivering her decisive vote, Carmem Lúcia denounced what she called an attempt to “sow the malignant seed of anti-democracy” in Brazil – but celebrated how the country’s institutions had survived and were fighting back."

7 months ago 6 0 0 1
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Brazil’s supreme court finds Bolsonaro guilty of plotting military coup Former president faces decades-long jail sentence for seeking to forcibly cling to power after losing 2022 election

great day!

www.theguardian.com/world/2025/s...

7 months ago 10 1 1 0

@climatehistorynet.bsky.social

8 months ago 0 0 0 0
Original call in Portuguese: https://revistas.udesc.br/index.php/tempo/dossie2026-1
[English] Call for Papers – Special Issue “Climate Crises and Social Consequences: Theory, History, Historiography”
We invite submissions for the special issue “Climate Crises and Social Consequences: Theory, History, Historiography” in the Brazilian journal Tempo e Argumento, until December 15, 2025. Tempo e Argumento publishes articles in Portuguese, English, and Spanish. It is devoted to the field of History of the Present.
Submission guidelines in English (click on the flag on the sidebar to change the language):
https://revistas.udesc.br/index.php/tempo/about/submissions

Organizers:
Claiton Marcio da Silva (UFFS) claiton@uffs.edu.br
William San Martín (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) wsanmartin@wpi.edu
André Secchieri Bailão (Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Fiocruz) asbailao@gmail.com

Original call in Portuguese: https://revistas.udesc.br/index.php/tempo/dossie2026-1 [English] Call for Papers – Special Issue “Climate Crises and Social Consequences: Theory, History, Historiography” We invite submissions for the special issue “Climate Crises and Social Consequences: Theory, History, Historiography” in the Brazilian journal Tempo e Argumento, until December 15, 2025. Tempo e Argumento publishes articles in Portuguese, English, and Spanish. It is devoted to the field of History of the Present. Submission guidelines in English (click on the flag on the sidebar to change the language): https://revistas.udesc.br/index.php/tempo/about/submissions Organizers: Claiton Marcio da Silva (UFFS) claiton@uffs.edu.br William San Martín (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) wsanmartin@wpi.edu André Secchieri Bailão (Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Fiocruz) asbailao@gmail.com

Controversies over responsibility for, and the consequences of, climate change have placed climate at the center of public debate, stimulating studies on characterization, impacts, adaptation, and mitigation. In the face of planetary transformations, scholars in the humanities have increasingly sought to bring atmospheric phenomena from the margins to the center of their analyses, aiming to understand the complex interdependencies between planet, life, and climate across multiple scales. Climate and its changes are experienced, lived, and conceptualized in diverse ways across different times and places—calling for context-specific historical analysis and research.
This special issue seeks contributions that explore the intersections between climate crises and their social consequences asking what potential lies in discussions shaped by different fields of history and the humanities. We welcome articles that address historical changes in perceptions—scientific, philosophical, humanistic, cultural, and media-related—about climate, its variability, and transformations, in both the past and present. These include contested sets of narratives and experiences that have underpinned explanations about the world, nonhuman beings and phenomena, peoples, and history across different groups, informing colonial, national, and international policies as well as the formation of research networks.

Controversies over responsibility for, and the consequences of, climate change have placed climate at the center of public debate, stimulating studies on characterization, impacts, adaptation, and mitigation. In the face of planetary transformations, scholars in the humanities have increasingly sought to bring atmospheric phenomena from the margins to the center of their analyses, aiming to understand the complex interdependencies between planet, life, and climate across multiple scales. Climate and its changes are experienced, lived, and conceptualized in diverse ways across different times and places—calling for context-specific historical analysis and research. This special issue seeks contributions that explore the intersections between climate crises and their social consequences asking what potential lies in discussions shaped by different fields of history and the humanities. We welcome articles that address historical changes in perceptions—scientific, philosophical, humanistic, cultural, and media-related—about climate, its variability, and transformations, in both the past and present. These include contested sets of narratives and experiences that have underpinned explanations about the world, nonhuman beings and phenomena, peoples, and history across different groups, informing colonial, national, and international policies as well as the formation of research networks.

We also welcome articles that investigate how climatic events relate to social change, political and economic structures, vulnerabilities and resilience; how such events produce and impact conflicts, epidemics, and other crises; how different groups construct narratives and memories of these events and engage in the public sphere; and the conflicts between different ways of knowing and living—including non-Western ones—in relation to climate change.
If you have any questions regarding the submission process or related to the scope of the special issue, please contact us.

We also welcome articles that investigate how climatic events relate to social change, political and economic structures, vulnerabilities and resilience; how such events produce and impact conflicts, epidemics, and other crises; how different groups construct narratives and memories of these events and engage in the public sphere; and the conflicts between different ways of knowing and living—including non-Western ones—in relation to climate change. If you have any questions regarding the submission process or related to the scope of the special issue, please contact us.

Call for Papers – Special Issue “Climate Crises and Social Consequences: Theory, History, Historiography” in the Brazilian open-access journal Tempo e Argumento. Articles in Port, English or Spanish in the field of History of the Present

Dec. 15 2025 #envhist

drive.google.com/file/d/1FViq...

8 months ago 5 1 1 0
a pavement crack at Paulista avenue in São Paulo, Brazil, opened up by a tree root, with tiny flowers growing beneath the raised sidewalk slab.

a pavement crack at Paulista avenue in São Paulo, Brazil, opened up by a tree root, with tiny flowers growing beneath the raised sidewalk slab.

a sidewalk crack opened up by this tree and colonized by emilias (Emilia sp.) #urbannature

8 months ago 4 0 0 0
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yesterday at the 'history and the crossroads of the climate crisis' roundtable at #solcha2025 the society for latin-american and caribbean environmental history conference

Adriana Sandoval Moreno, from Mexico, Juan Facundo Rojas, from Argentina, Katherinne Mora Pacheco, from Colombia, and me!

8 months ago 3 0 0 0
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[Portuguese only]

Publicamos o dossiê temático de história das ciências "A Amazônia e o Antropoceno" no Boletim CTS em Foco, publicação da ESOCITE. Com 8 artigos de pesquisadores da Casa de Oswaldo Cruz.

esocite.org.br/images/BOLET...

1 year ago 5 2 0 0
| Enciclopédia de Antropologia

We are an online encyclopedia of Anthropology, at the University of São Paulo, Brazil. We have over 100 entries in Portuguese on authors, publications, concepts, institutions, anthropological fields and currents. The English version was launched in 2024 with 15 entries: ea.fflch.usp.br/en #anthrosky

1 year ago 6 1 0 0

Enciclopédia de Antropologia (EA), the online encyclopedia of Anthropology from Brazil, is now on bluesky:

@ea-antropo

#anthrosky #anthropology #antropologia

bsky.app/profile/ea-a...

1 year ago 7 1 0 0

thanks! I just sent you in the dm

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

hey Elaine, really interesting course!! I'm organizing a history of botany, plants and plantation seminar next semester here in Brazil. would you mind sharing your syallabus with me? I could do the same as soon as I have mine

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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Proxies for Justice The climate history of tropical regions has been chronically understudied. Correcting the record will require new methods and new mindsets.

“If one function of climate science is to address a global climate crisis, then the form of researching and making climate archives—how, where, and with whom—must also change”

A 🔥 collaborative #envhist essay by @roguechieftan.bsky.social & Lina Pérez-Angelis

www.sciencehistory.org/stories/maga...

1 year ago 54 17 2 3

Published since 2015, there are now over 100 entries in Portuguese on authors, publications, concepts, institutions, and currents. They have PDF versions, images, bibliography, and we included editor’s notes in the translated versions with additional information for our international readers.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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#anthropology #socialsciences #ethnology #philosophy #sociology

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Front page of Enciclopédia de Antropologia, an online encyclopedia of anthropology from Brazil.

The texts says: The intention from the outset was for this encyclopaedia of anthropology to be used as a work tool. Initially resulting from a partnership between students and professors of the Department of Anthropology at the University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil, it was born in the classroom, fed by the exchanges and debates that took place on the regular graduate courses. The project expanded, overflowing its original spaces, although remaining faithful to the spirit that first guided it – a spirit marked by experimentation and mutual learning, which, day by day, defined the profile and content of the work. Reflecting the way it has grown and evolved, the name attributed to the project (‘Encyclopaedia’) should not give the illusion of totality or completeness. On the contrary, it is a work in continual formation whose developments and additions will be defined by the research and the combined reflections of staff and students. While it diverges from the idea of a totality that usually informs the encyclopaedic project, it retains the dimension of a collective collaboration, hence the decision to maintain the name.

Front page of Enciclopédia de Antropologia, an online encyclopedia of anthropology from Brazil. The texts says: The intention from the outset was for this encyclopaedia of anthropology to be used as a work tool. Initially resulting from a partnership between students and professors of the Department of Anthropology at the University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil, it was born in the classroom, fed by the exchanges and debates that took place on the regular graduate courses. The project expanded, overflowing its original spaces, although remaining faithful to the spirit that first guided it – a spirit marked by experimentation and mutual learning, which, day by day, defined the profile and content of the work. Reflecting the way it has grown and evolved, the name attributed to the project (‘Encyclopaedia’) should not give the illusion of totality or completeness. On the contrary, it is a work in continual formation whose developments and additions will be defined by the research and the combined reflections of staff and students. While it diverges from the idea of a totality that usually informs the encyclopaedic project, it retains the dimension of a collective collaboration, hence the decision to maintain the name.

Front page of Enciclopédia de Antropologia, an online encyclopedia of anthropology from Brazil. 

The text says: The Enciclopédia de Antropologia contains individually authored and alphabetically organized entries covering biographies of authors and activists, publications (books, essays, edited volumes), concepts and debates, intellectual currents, subfields, and institutions. Deliberately synthetic and presented in an accessible language, the entries are designed to guide those interested in learning more about concepts, works, and authors central to anthropological reflection. A work and training tool for those who produced the texts, the EA is also intended as a research and learning tool for the reader, who, in addition to being able to browse through the published texts, will also have access to a bibliography, allowing them to explore new paths if they so wish.

Of our more than 100 entries in Portuguese, those specifically related to Brazil, such as Brazilian authors, institutions, and issues were translated into English. They are accompanied by editor's notes containing additional explanations and contextual information, written for our international readers.

Our objective is to disseminate knowledge produced in academia. Readers are therefore more than welcome to circulate the published texts as long as they are fully cited with the title of the entry, the name of the author(s), the website address, and the date when the entry was consulted. We offer examples of how to cite each entry at the end of them.

Front page of Enciclopédia de Antropologia, an online encyclopedia of anthropology from Brazil. The text says: The Enciclopédia de Antropologia contains individually authored and alphabetically organized entries covering biographies of authors and activists, publications (books, essays, edited volumes), concepts and debates, intellectual currents, subfields, and institutions. Deliberately synthetic and presented in an accessible language, the entries are designed to guide those interested in learning more about concepts, works, and authors central to anthropological reflection. A work and training tool for those who produced the texts, the EA is also intended as a research and learning tool for the reader, who, in addition to being able to browse through the published texts, will also have access to a bibliography, allowing them to explore new paths if they so wish. Of our more than 100 entries in Portuguese, those specifically related to Brazil, such as Brazilian authors, institutions, and issues were translated into English. They are accompanied by editor's notes containing additional explanations and contextual information, written for our international readers. Our objective is to disseminate knowledge produced in academia. Readers are therefore more than welcome to circulate the published texts as long as they are fully cited with the title of the entry, the name of the author(s), the website address, and the date when the entry was consulted. We offer examples of how to cite each entry at the end of them.

Alphabetical index of the encyclopedia, with two entries: Amerindian perspectivism, Sandra Benites

Alphabetical index of the encyclopedia, with two entries: Amerindian perspectivism, Sandra Benites

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We have launched the English version of Enciclopédia de Antropologia, an online encyclopedia of anthropology from Brazil.
We have translated 15 entries covering Brazilian topics, such as Amerindian perspectivism, Afro-Brazilian feminists and Indigenous authors. Please share it!

ea.fflch.usp.br/en

1 year ago 47 22 3 2

Biden praticou “greenwashing” na Amazônia. Deixou para vir ao Brasil depois de uma derrota eleitoral acachapante, em final de mandato, enfraquecido politicamente, p/anunciar uma doação ridícula pro Fundo Amazônia (que ainda dependerá do sinal verde do Congresso americano). Good retirement, pal!

1 year ago 507 76 10 9

queria uma fancam dela!

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
a tiny jumping spider, black with white stripes, just chilling beneath my kitchen window

a tiny jumping spider, black with white stripes, just chilling beneath my kitchen window

all the fruit flies in my kitchen are gone thanks to this queen

1 year ago 14 1 0 0

sdds desse show saí derretido de suor de tanto pular places I COULD astral project to

1 year ago 2 0 1 0
Financial Times tweets: "The Re-election of Donald Trump is a decisive rejection of liberalism, writes Francis Fukuyama (author of "The End of History and the Last Man")"

Financial Times tweets: "The Re-election of Donald Trump is a decisive rejection of liberalism, writes Francis Fukuyama (author of "The End of History and the Last Man")"

history is so back

1 year ago 1559 281 78 87
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*voz do narrador da globo* pos-historia: a historia agora é outra. uma historia cheia de aventuras e confusões. amanhã à tarde após o fim da história!

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

the night iraniano?

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

mocreia

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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1 year ago 2 0 0 0

idem

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

nova musica da any

1 year ago 2 0 1 0

e eu que tirei mil pacotinhos do evento e não ganhei nenhum lapras so veio LIXO ♡

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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a person wearing plastic gloves is cutting a piece of salmon on a cutting board . ALT: a person wearing plastic gloves is cutting a piece of salmon on a cutting board .
1 year ago 2 0 0 0

“Doomscrolling” is so limited. Today I have also doomedited, doomresearched my next story, and I’m about to doomeat a frozen doomburrito. You gotta be open to new doomexperiences.

1 year ago 5161 753 69 41