Third book of the Culture of Transgressions series released

By ETCO
13/01/2012

(from left to right: Moreira, Cardoso, Junqueira, Abdenur, Ribeiro, and Hoche Pulcherio, chairman of the ETCO Board of Directors)

On August 18, ETCO and iFHC met with authors and guests at the Museum of Modern Art in São Paulo to launch the book Cultura das Transgressões - Cenários do Amanhã, a work that completes the series started in 2008, with “ Lições da História ”, followed by“ Visões do Presente ”in 2009. In this volume, coordinated by Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Roberto Abdenur, Aristides Junqueira collaborated; Gilmar Mendes Ferreira; Paul Singer; Renato Janine Ribeiro and Marcílio Marques Moreira.

(Roberto Abdenur and Fernando Henrique Cardoso)

Consolidated economic stability after 17 years of the Real Plan, respect for democratic rules and the rise of class C are factors that pave the way for changing a culture that has been jamming the machine of Brazilian society since the 16th century: the culture of transgressions .

Certain that in order to rise to the most developed societies in history, it is essential that the country manages to advance within the legal environment, the Brazilian Institute of Competitive Ethics (ETCO) and the Fernando Henrique Cardoso Institute (iFHC) are determined to lead a process that makes transgression a term of the past.

According to Roberto Abdenur, ETCO's executive president, “the partnership between iFHC and ETCO has been valuable in sustaining the discussion on the issue of transgression, since the innovations and transformations of society have to obey permanent guidelines regarding the ethical principles. It is not because the next one disrespects ethical principles that we can do the same ”.

Culture of Transgressions - Scenarios of Tomorrow is the third book in the series started in 2008 with Culture of Transgressions - Lessons from History, followed by Culture of Transgressions - Visions of the Present, 2009. Like the previous two, this work is the result of debate namesake, held at iFHC in April, bringing together four of its five authors: Aristides Junqueira; Marcílio Marques Moreira; Paul Singer and Renato Janine Ribeiro to discuss ways to modify this culture, rooted in a part of the Brazilian population.

“It is necessary to join forces in order to act without transgression and to demand that our representatives in the Executive, Legislative and Judiciary branches not violate. Then, yes, we will have the tomorrow we want for Brazil ”, adds Abdenur.

About the authors:

Aristides Junqueira Alvarenga holds a master's degree in law from the Faculty of Law of the University of São Paulo and a bachelor's degree in Law from the Faculty of Law of the Federal University of Minas Gerais. He was Attorney General of the Republic for three terms. He is the author of the book “The criminal jurisdiction of the Federal Court of First Instance” (Saraiva) and dozens of articles and essays on legal topics. He received several official decorations, as well as titles of honorary citizenship from States and Municipalities.

Gilmar Ferreira Mendes he is minister of the Superior Electoral Court, of which he was president between the years of 2008 and 2010. He also held the presidency of the National Council of Justice (2008/2010) and of the Superior Electoral Court (2006). He is a professor of Constitutional Law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Brasilia and the Brasiliense Institute of Public Law. Doctor of Law from the University of Münster, Germany, he is an individual member of the Venice Commission. He has dozens of published works, including “Course on Constitutional Law” (Saraiva).

Marcílio Marques Moreira, president of the ETCO Advisory Council, holds a bachelor's degree in law from the State University of Rio de Janeiro and a master's degree in political science from Georgetown University. He is an honorary member of the University Council of PUC and an effective member of the Board of Directors of the Catholic University of Petrópolis and the Fundação Getulio Vargas, among other academic and cultural institutions in Brazil and the United States. University professor since 1956, he held a series of public positions, as Brazilian ambassador to the United States and Minister of Finance.

Paul Israel Singer he is the national secretary of Solidarity Economy at the Ministry of Labor and Employment and a full professor at the Faculty of Economics, Administration and Accounting at the University of São Paulo. He was São Paulo's Municipal Planning Secretary (1989-1992). He is the author of “Learning the economy”, “Brazil in crisis - dangers and opportunities”, “Political economy of urbanization”, “Globalization and unemployment”, “What is the economy” and “To understand the financial world”, and author of “The solidarity economy in Brazil”, all by Editora Contexto.

Renato Janine Ribeiro he is a professor of Ethics and Political Philosophy at the University of São Paulo, where he also obtained his doctorate, after defending his master's degree at Sorbonne. Among others, he published the following books: “The society against the social: the high cost of public life in Brazil” (Companhia das Letras, 2000, Jabuti Award) and “The last reason of the kings” (Companhia das letras, 2002) and “For a new policy” (Ateliê Editorial, 2003). He was director of evaluation at Capes (2004-2008), as well as visiting professor at Columbia University.

CULTURE OF TRANSGRESSIONS IN BRAZIL
Tomorrow's Scenarios
Coordination: Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Roberto Abdenur
Foreword: Sergio Fausto
Collaborators: Aristides Junqueira; Gilmar Ferreira Mendes; Marcílio Marques Moreira; Paul Singer and Renato Janine Ribeiro
Editora Saraiva
1st edition, 2011, brochure, 156 pages
Suggested price: R $ 45,00
ISBN 978-85-02-13689-2

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