quarta-feira, 21 de outubro de 2009

Brazil's New Racial Equality Law Is Watered Down. But Blacks Are Not Complaining

Written by Michelle Amaral
Friday, 16 October 2009 01:29


Although there are different evaluations of how much impact the newly House-approved Statute of Racial Equality will have on the reality of racism in Brazil , the majority of black movements in Brazil claim the statute as a victory, at least symbolic in nature.
The original proposal for the statute, authored by Paulo Paim (Workers' Party from Rio Grande do Sul state) and approved in the House of Representatives on September 9, underwent several revisions. Many of the historical demands of African descendants were removed.
The alterations of the bill were a result of an agreement made between the Special Secretary of Policies for the Promotion of Racial Equality, Edson Santos, and members of a special House commission which has filed lawsuits regarding the unconstitutionality of racial quotas as well as the recent presidential decree, which paved the way for land titles for quilombos, communities of descendents of runaway slaves.
Brasil de Fato

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