{"title":"A transição democrática em disputa","authors":"Aimée Schneider Duarte","doi":"10.15175/1984-2503-201810104","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Throughout the 1980s, Brazilian society came to revive a series of social and cultural movements which contributed to a political shift in the transition of the authoritarian regime to the Rule of Law. The campaigns for an Anistia Ampla, Geral e Irrestrita and Diretas Ja! are examples of such political mobilization with popular participation. The following article focuses on the installation of a National Constituent Assembly (ANC) as a project of social negotiation, and the search for consensuses between potentially conflicting memories in the aim of preventing conflicts that would threaten the establishment of democracy. In the period of February 1, 1987 to 5 October, 1988, the building of the National Congress served as a stage for the organizing of a new Constitution. Although this provided a symbol for the new era, it carried – and continues to carry – traces of the previous historical period it aimed to break with. Considering the 30-year anniversary in 2018 of the ANC’s inauguration and the promulgation of the Federal Constitution itself (1988), the subject becomes even more pertinent in light of these significant dates and the socially-constructed memories.","PeriodicalId":41789,"journal":{"name":"Passagens-International Review of Political History and Legal Culture","volume":"10 1","pages":"70-92"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2018-02-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Passagens-International Review of Political History and Legal Culture","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15175/1984-2503-201810104","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Throughout the 1980s, Brazilian society came to revive a series of social and cultural movements which contributed to a political shift in the transition of the authoritarian regime to the Rule of Law. The campaigns for an Anistia Ampla, Geral e Irrestrita and Diretas Ja! are examples of such political mobilization with popular participation. The following article focuses on the installation of a National Constituent Assembly (ANC) as a project of social negotiation, and the search for consensuses between potentially conflicting memories in the aim of preventing conflicts that would threaten the establishment of democracy. In the period of February 1, 1987 to 5 October, 1988, the building of the National Congress served as a stage for the organizing of a new Constitution. Although this provided a symbol for the new era, it carried – and continues to carry – traces of the previous historical period it aimed to break with. Considering the 30-year anniversary in 2018 of the ANC’s inauguration and the promulgation of the Federal Constitution itself (1988), the subject becomes even more pertinent in light of these significant dates and the socially-constructed memories.
在整个20世纪80年代,巴西社会开始恢复一系列社会和文化运动,这些运动促成了专制政权向法治过渡的政治转变。Anistia Ampla、general e Irrestrita和Diretas Ja!都是这种有民众参与的政治动员的例子。下面这篇文章的重点是建立一个全国制宪会议,作为社会谈判的一个项目,并在可能相互冲突的记忆之间寻求协商一致意见,以防止可能威胁到建立民主的冲突。在1987年2月1日至1988年10月5日期间,国民大会的建立成为组织一部新宪法的舞台。虽然这为新时代提供了一个象征,但它保留了——并继续保留着——它旨在打破的上一个历史时期的痕迹。2018年是非洲人国民大会(ANC)成立和颁布《联邦宪法》(1988年)30周年,考虑到这些重要的日期和社会建构的记忆,这个主题变得更加贴切。