Resumo Este texto analisa os multiplos processos que produziram e foram produzidos pela Operacao ... more Resumo Este texto analisa os multiplos processos que produziram e foram produzidos pela Operacao Lava Jato em um contexto de crise da formacao social brasileira. Tais processos, conjugados em uma unidade ruptural, foram capazes de desestabilizar e reorganizar o bloco hegemonico no poder, impulsionando Jair Bolsonaro. A Lava Jato operou, em suas praticas e discursos, atraves da forma-narrativa, de modo a expandir, por meio de sua capacidade de formatacao, a ideologia dominante em sentido amplo, tracando um enredo com herois e viloes. Palavras-chave: Operacao Lava Jato; Crises; Narrativa e Ideologia. Abstract This article analyzes multiple processes that produce and are produced by the Carwash Operation during a context of crisis in the Brazilian social formation. Such processes, conjoined in a ruptural unity, were capable of destabilizing as well as reorganizing the hegemonic bloc, propelling Jair Bolsonaro to its command. Carwash Operation functioned by expanding, through its form a...
Cem anos da Constituição de Weimar (1919-2019), 2019
Tentando, então, olhar para um passado que se presentifica no léxico dos direitos sociais, ou p... more Tentando, então, olhar para um passado que se presentifica no léxico dos direitos sociais, ou para um passado que talvez se presentifique mais ainda pela conjuntura social de hoje – que parece flertar com o que outrora chamamos de fascismo –, o artigo olha para Weimar pelas lentes do presente brasileiro. Este artigo está estruturado em três tópicos. O primeiro traz um ponto de partida concreto: a ascensão do autoritarismo na conjuntura brasileira, que podemos identificar a partir de 2013. Isso não significa, de forma alguma, que enxergamos as marchas de Junho de 2013 como “conservadoras” ou “protestos da direita”. Não é Junho de 2013 que dá início ao conservadorismo brasileiro, como sabemos (nossos historiadores já documentaram reiteradamente7 o papel de movimentos conservadores “populares” ao longo da história brasileira). Mas Junho marcou um momento relevante para a visibilidade da direita radicalizada no Brasil e possivelmente abriu as vias para um novo movimento conservador. A direita voltou à rua, organizou-se à luz da rua, estruturou-se de uma maneira mais fluida. E é por isso que entendemos que, ao menos desde 2013, está em voga um processo histórico diferente, que culminou na ascensão da extrema direita à Presidência da República.
Resumo:
Este texto analisa os múltiplos processos que produziram a Operação Lava Jato e foram... more Resumo: Este texto analisa os múltiplos processos que produziram a Operação Lava Jato e foram por ela produzidos um contexto de crise da formação social brasileira. Tais processos, conjugados em uma unidade ruptural, foram capazes de desestabilizar e reorganizar o bloco hegemônico no poder, impulsionando Jair Bolsonaro. A Lava Jato operou, em suas práticas e discursos, através da forma-narrativa, de modo a expandir, por meio de sua capacidade de formatação, a ideologia dominante em sentido amplo, traçando um enredo com heróis e vilões.
Palavras-chave: Operação Lava Jato; Crises; Narrativa e Ideologia.
The first edition of this Research Handbook offers unparalleled insights into the large-scale res... more The first edition of this Research Handbook offers unparalleled insights into the large-scale resurgence of interest in Marx and Marxism in recent years, with contributions devoted specifically to Marxist critiques of law, rights, and the state.
The Research Handbook brings together thirty-three scholars of Marx, Marxism, and law from around the world to offer theoretically informed introductions to the Marxist tradition of social critique, contemporary Marxist analyses of law and rights, and future orientations of Marxist legal analysis. Chapters testify to the strength of Marxist critical tools for understanding the role of law, rights, and the state in capitalist societies.
Exploring Marxist critique across an extraordinarily wide range of scholarly disciplines, this Research Handbook is a must-read for scholars of law, politics, sociology, philosophy, and political economy who are interested in Marxism. Graduate and advanced undergraduate students in these and related disciplines will also benefit from the Research Handbook.
The volume is edited by Paul O'Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London) and Umut Özsu (Associate Professor of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University).
Contributors include Max Ajl (Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Social Sciences, Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University & Research), Rémi Bachand (Professor of Law, Université du Québec à Montréal), Miriam Bak McKenna (Lecturer in Law, Lund University), Clyde W. Barrow (Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Enzo Bello (Associate Professor, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro), Bill Bowring (Professor of Law, Birkbeck, University of London), Honor Brabazon (Assistant Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies, St. Jerome’s University in the University of Waterloo), Gustavo Capela (PhD Candidate in Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley), Cosmin Sebastian Cercel (Associate Professor of Law, University of Nottingham), B. S. Chimni (Distinguished Professor of International Law, OP Jindal Global University), Pablo Ciocchini (Lecturer in Criminology, University of Liverpool), Natalia Delgado (Lecturer in Law, University of Southampton), Matthew Dimick (Professor of Law, University of Buffalo), Radha D’Souza (Reader in Law, University of Westminster), Michael Head (Professor of Law, Western Sydney University), Nate Holdren (Associate Professor of Law, Politics, and Society, Drake University), Rob Hunter (Independent Scholar, PhD in Politics, Princeton University), Talina Hürzeler (Independent Scholar, LLB, University of New South Wales), Bob Jessop (Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Lancaster), Rene José Keller (Independent Scholar, PhD in Law, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, and PhD in Social Work, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul), Rafael Khachaturian (Lecturer in Critical Writing, University of Pennsylvania), Stéfanie Khoury (Independent Scholar, PhD in Sociology of Law, Università degli Studi di Milano and Universidad del País Vasco), Dimitrios Kivotidis (Lecturer in Law, University of East London), Daniel McLoughlin (Senior Lecturer in Law, Society, and Criminology, University of New South Wales), Eva Nanopoulos (Senior Lecturer in Law, Queen Mary, University of London), August H. Nimtz (Professor of Political Science and African American and African Studies, University of Minnesota), Paul O’Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Chris O’Kane (Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Rebecca Schein (Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Carleton University), Igor Shoikhedbrod (Assistant Professor of Political Science and Law, Justice, and Society, Dalhousie University), Nimer Sultany (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Christine Sypnowich (Professor of Philosophy, Queen’s University), and Ahmed White (Professor of Law, University of Colorado at Boulder).
Resumo Este texto analisa os multiplos processos que produziram e foram produzidos pela Operacao ... more Resumo Este texto analisa os multiplos processos que produziram e foram produzidos pela Operacao Lava Jato em um contexto de crise da formacao social brasileira. Tais processos, conjugados em uma unidade ruptural, foram capazes de desestabilizar e reorganizar o bloco hegemonico no poder, impulsionando Jair Bolsonaro. A Lava Jato operou, em suas praticas e discursos, atraves da forma-narrativa, de modo a expandir, por meio de sua capacidade de formatacao, a ideologia dominante em sentido amplo, tracando um enredo com herois e viloes. Palavras-chave: Operacao Lava Jato; Crises; Narrativa e Ideologia. Abstract This article analyzes multiple processes that produce and are produced by the Carwash Operation during a context of crisis in the Brazilian social formation. Such processes, conjoined in a ruptural unity, were capable of destabilizing as well as reorganizing the hegemonic bloc, propelling Jair Bolsonaro to its command. Carwash Operation functioned by expanding, through its form a...
Cem anos da Constituição de Weimar (1919-2019), 2019
Tentando, então, olhar para um passado que se presentifica no léxico dos direitos sociais, ou p... more Tentando, então, olhar para um passado que se presentifica no léxico dos direitos sociais, ou para um passado que talvez se presentifique mais ainda pela conjuntura social de hoje – que parece flertar com o que outrora chamamos de fascismo –, o artigo olha para Weimar pelas lentes do presente brasileiro. Este artigo está estruturado em três tópicos. O primeiro traz um ponto de partida concreto: a ascensão do autoritarismo na conjuntura brasileira, que podemos identificar a partir de 2013. Isso não significa, de forma alguma, que enxergamos as marchas de Junho de 2013 como “conservadoras” ou “protestos da direita”. Não é Junho de 2013 que dá início ao conservadorismo brasileiro, como sabemos (nossos historiadores já documentaram reiteradamente7 o papel de movimentos conservadores “populares” ao longo da história brasileira). Mas Junho marcou um momento relevante para a visibilidade da direita radicalizada no Brasil e possivelmente abriu as vias para um novo movimento conservador. A direita voltou à rua, organizou-se à luz da rua, estruturou-se de uma maneira mais fluida. E é por isso que entendemos que, ao menos desde 2013, está em voga um processo histórico diferente, que culminou na ascensão da extrema direita à Presidência da República.
Resumo:
Este texto analisa os múltiplos processos que produziram a Operação Lava Jato e foram... more Resumo: Este texto analisa os múltiplos processos que produziram a Operação Lava Jato e foram por ela produzidos um contexto de crise da formação social brasileira. Tais processos, conjugados em uma unidade ruptural, foram capazes de desestabilizar e reorganizar o bloco hegemônico no poder, impulsionando Jair Bolsonaro. A Lava Jato operou, em suas práticas e discursos, através da forma-narrativa, de modo a expandir, por meio de sua capacidade de formatação, a ideologia dominante em sentido amplo, traçando um enredo com heróis e vilões.
Palavras-chave: Operação Lava Jato; Crises; Narrativa e Ideologia.
The first edition of this Research Handbook offers unparalleled insights into the large-scale res... more The first edition of this Research Handbook offers unparalleled insights into the large-scale resurgence of interest in Marx and Marxism in recent years, with contributions devoted specifically to Marxist critiques of law, rights, and the state.
The Research Handbook brings together thirty-three scholars of Marx, Marxism, and law from around the world to offer theoretically informed introductions to the Marxist tradition of social critique, contemporary Marxist analyses of law and rights, and future orientations of Marxist legal analysis. Chapters testify to the strength of Marxist critical tools for understanding the role of law, rights, and the state in capitalist societies.
Exploring Marxist critique across an extraordinarily wide range of scholarly disciplines, this Research Handbook is a must-read for scholars of law, politics, sociology, philosophy, and political economy who are interested in Marxism. Graduate and advanced undergraduate students in these and related disciplines will also benefit from the Research Handbook.
The volume is edited by Paul O'Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London) and Umut Özsu (Associate Professor of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University).
Contributors include Max Ajl (Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Social Sciences, Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University & Research), Rémi Bachand (Professor of Law, Université du Québec à Montréal), Miriam Bak McKenna (Lecturer in Law, Lund University), Clyde W. Barrow (Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Enzo Bello (Associate Professor, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro), Bill Bowring (Professor of Law, Birkbeck, University of London), Honor Brabazon (Assistant Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies, St. Jerome’s University in the University of Waterloo), Gustavo Capela (PhD Candidate in Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley), Cosmin Sebastian Cercel (Associate Professor of Law, University of Nottingham), B. S. Chimni (Distinguished Professor of International Law, OP Jindal Global University), Pablo Ciocchini (Lecturer in Criminology, University of Liverpool), Natalia Delgado (Lecturer in Law, University of Southampton), Matthew Dimick (Professor of Law, University of Buffalo), Radha D’Souza (Reader in Law, University of Westminster), Michael Head (Professor of Law, Western Sydney University), Nate Holdren (Associate Professor of Law, Politics, and Society, Drake University), Rob Hunter (Independent Scholar, PhD in Politics, Princeton University), Talina Hürzeler (Independent Scholar, LLB, University of New South Wales), Bob Jessop (Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Lancaster), Rene José Keller (Independent Scholar, PhD in Law, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, and PhD in Social Work, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul), Rafael Khachaturian (Lecturer in Critical Writing, University of Pennsylvania), Stéfanie Khoury (Independent Scholar, PhD in Sociology of Law, Università degli Studi di Milano and Universidad del País Vasco), Dimitrios Kivotidis (Lecturer in Law, University of East London), Daniel McLoughlin (Senior Lecturer in Law, Society, and Criminology, University of New South Wales), Eva Nanopoulos (Senior Lecturer in Law, Queen Mary, University of London), August H. Nimtz (Professor of Political Science and African American and African Studies, University of Minnesota), Paul O’Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Chris O’Kane (Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Rebecca Schein (Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Carleton University), Igor Shoikhedbrod (Assistant Professor of Political Science and Law, Justice, and Society, Dalhousie University), Nimer Sultany (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Christine Sypnowich (Professor of Philosophy, Queen’s University), and Ahmed White (Professor of Law, University of Colorado at Boulder).
Uploads
Papers by Gustavo Capela
Este texto analisa os múltiplos processos que produziram a Operação Lava Jato e foram por ela produzidos um contexto de crise da formação social brasileira. Tais processos, conjugados em uma unidade ruptural, foram capazes de desestabilizar e reorganizar o bloco hegemônico no poder, impulsionando Jair Bolsonaro. A Lava Jato operou, em suas práticas e discursos, através da forma-narrativa, de modo a expandir, por meio de sua capacidade de formatação, a ideologia dominante em sentido amplo, traçando um enredo com heróis e vilões.
Palavras-chave: Operação Lava Jato; Crises; Narrativa e Ideologia.
Book Proposals by Gustavo Capela
The Research Handbook brings together thirty-three scholars of Marx, Marxism, and law from around the world to offer theoretically informed introductions to the Marxist tradition of social critique, contemporary Marxist analyses of law and rights, and future orientations of Marxist legal analysis. Chapters testify to the strength of Marxist critical tools for understanding the role of law, rights, and the state in capitalist societies.
Exploring Marxist critique across an extraordinarily wide range of scholarly disciplines, this Research Handbook is a must-read for scholars of law, politics, sociology, philosophy, and political economy who are interested in Marxism. Graduate and advanced undergraduate students in these and related disciplines will also benefit from the Research Handbook.
The volume is edited by Paul O'Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London) and Umut Özsu (Associate Professor of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University).
Contributors include Max Ajl (Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Social Sciences, Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University & Research), Rémi Bachand (Professor of Law, Université du Québec à Montréal), Miriam Bak McKenna (Lecturer in Law, Lund University), Clyde W. Barrow (Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Enzo Bello (Associate Professor, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro), Bill Bowring (Professor of Law, Birkbeck, University of London), Honor Brabazon (Assistant Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies, St. Jerome’s University in the University of Waterloo), Gustavo Capela (PhD Candidate in Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley), Cosmin Sebastian Cercel (Associate Professor of Law, University of Nottingham), B. S. Chimni (Distinguished Professor of International Law, OP Jindal Global University), Pablo Ciocchini (Lecturer in Criminology, University of Liverpool), Natalia Delgado (Lecturer in Law, University of Southampton), Matthew Dimick (Professor of Law, University of Buffalo), Radha D’Souza (Reader in Law, University of Westminster), Michael Head (Professor of Law, Western Sydney University), Nate Holdren (Associate Professor of Law, Politics, and Society, Drake University), Rob Hunter (Independent Scholar, PhD in Politics, Princeton University), Talina Hürzeler (Independent Scholar, LLB, University of New South Wales), Bob Jessop (Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Lancaster), Rene José Keller (Independent Scholar, PhD in Law, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, and PhD in Social Work, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul), Rafael Khachaturian (Lecturer in Critical Writing, University of Pennsylvania), Stéfanie Khoury (Independent Scholar, PhD in Sociology of Law, Università degli Studi di Milano and Universidad del País Vasco), Dimitrios Kivotidis (Lecturer in Law, University of East London), Daniel McLoughlin (Senior Lecturer in Law, Society, and Criminology, University of New South Wales), Eva Nanopoulos (Senior Lecturer in Law, Queen Mary, University of London), August H. Nimtz (Professor of Political Science and African American and African Studies, University of Minnesota), Paul O’Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Chris O’Kane (Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Rebecca Schein (Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Carleton University), Igor Shoikhedbrod (Assistant Professor of Political Science and Law, Justice, and Society, Dalhousie University), Nimer Sultany (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Christine Sypnowich (Professor of Philosophy, Queen’s University), and Ahmed White (Professor of Law, University of Colorado at Boulder).
Este texto analisa os múltiplos processos que produziram a Operação Lava Jato e foram por ela produzidos um contexto de crise da formação social brasileira. Tais processos, conjugados em uma unidade ruptural, foram capazes de desestabilizar e reorganizar o bloco hegemônico no poder, impulsionando Jair Bolsonaro. A Lava Jato operou, em suas práticas e discursos, através da forma-narrativa, de modo a expandir, por meio de sua capacidade de formatação, a ideologia dominante em sentido amplo, traçando um enredo com heróis e vilões.
Palavras-chave: Operação Lava Jato; Crises; Narrativa e Ideologia.
The Research Handbook brings together thirty-three scholars of Marx, Marxism, and law from around the world to offer theoretically informed introductions to the Marxist tradition of social critique, contemporary Marxist analyses of law and rights, and future orientations of Marxist legal analysis. Chapters testify to the strength of Marxist critical tools for understanding the role of law, rights, and the state in capitalist societies.
Exploring Marxist critique across an extraordinarily wide range of scholarly disciplines, this Research Handbook is a must-read for scholars of law, politics, sociology, philosophy, and political economy who are interested in Marxism. Graduate and advanced undergraduate students in these and related disciplines will also benefit from the Research Handbook.
The volume is edited by Paul O'Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London) and Umut Özsu (Associate Professor of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University).
Contributors include Max Ajl (Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Social Sciences, Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University & Research), Rémi Bachand (Professor of Law, Université du Québec à Montréal), Miriam Bak McKenna (Lecturer in Law, Lund University), Clyde W. Barrow (Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Enzo Bello (Associate Professor, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro), Bill Bowring (Professor of Law, Birkbeck, University of London), Honor Brabazon (Assistant Professor of Sociology and Legal Studies, St. Jerome’s University in the University of Waterloo), Gustavo Capela (PhD Candidate in Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley), Cosmin Sebastian Cercel (Associate Professor of Law, University of Nottingham), B. S. Chimni (Distinguished Professor of International Law, OP Jindal Global University), Pablo Ciocchini (Lecturer in Criminology, University of Liverpool), Natalia Delgado (Lecturer in Law, University of Southampton), Matthew Dimick (Professor of Law, University of Buffalo), Radha D’Souza (Reader in Law, University of Westminster), Michael Head (Professor of Law, Western Sydney University), Nate Holdren (Associate Professor of Law, Politics, and Society, Drake University), Rob Hunter (Independent Scholar, PhD in Politics, Princeton University), Talina Hürzeler (Independent Scholar, LLB, University of New South Wales), Bob Jessop (Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Lancaster), Rene José Keller (Independent Scholar, PhD in Law, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, and PhD in Social Work, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul), Rafael Khachaturian (Lecturer in Critical Writing, University of Pennsylvania), Stéfanie Khoury (Independent Scholar, PhD in Sociology of Law, Università degli Studi di Milano and Universidad del País Vasco), Dimitrios Kivotidis (Lecturer in Law, University of East London), Daniel McLoughlin (Senior Lecturer in Law, Society, and Criminology, University of New South Wales), Eva Nanopoulos (Senior Lecturer in Law, Queen Mary, University of London), August H. Nimtz (Professor of Political Science and African American and African Studies, University of Minnesota), Paul O’Connell (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Chris O’Kane (Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), Rebecca Schein (Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Carleton University), Igor Shoikhedbrod (Assistant Professor of Political Science and Law, Justice, and Society, Dalhousie University), Nimer Sultany (Reader in Law, SOAS, University of London), Christine Sypnowich (Professor of Philosophy, Queen’s University), and Ahmed White (Professor of Law, University of Colorado at Boulder).