Temas de relações internacionais, de política externa e de diplomacia brasileira, com ênfase em políticas econômicas, em viagens, livros e cultura em geral. Um quilombo de resistência intelectual em defesa da racionalidade, da inteligência e das liberdades democráticas.
O que é este blog?
Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida.
On Monday we publishedDavid Rieff’s deep analysis of Argentina’s recent general election, “Is Another Dose of Peronism the Cure for Macri Economics?” That dose of Peronism comes by virtue of a return to power, though this time as vice-president, for Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who ruled as president from 2007 to 2015, after the presidency of her husband, Néstor Kirchner.
Living part of the year in Buenos Aires makes Rieff a truly embedded reporter—an acute observer who is able to explain not only why the previous, non-Peronist president, Mauricio Macri, had failed so badly to live up to his own boast of economic competence, but also the complex dynamics of Peronism, that uniquely Argentine form of populism. The article includes some choice examples of the delicious, wry details for which David has a special eye—such as the publication of an open letter of protest from 800Lacanianpsychoanalysts (only in Argentina!).
But why Buenos Aires, was my first question to him when we caught up this week via email. “I went there about ten years ago for a conference, I found it fascinating, and kept returning,” he said. “Now I’m finally beginning to write about it. But I also spend time every year in Johannesburg and Dublin. Philip Roth used to tease me, saying that I came from an intellectual somewhere but an ethnic and geographical nowhere,” he went on. “I’m not sure that’s right but I am at ease—not at home: that’s a bridge too far for me—in many places.”
Roth and Carlos Fuentes were two of the many writers David edited during a decade at Farrar, Straus and Giroux. “I’m not sure how useful I was to either of them,” he told me. “With Roth, I acted as a sounding board as he revised and revised drafts of the novels I helped him edit. I think the book on which I was of most use was The Counterlife.”
Quite an item to have on one’s curriculum vitae. But David’s résumé also includes hundreds of articles as well as more than a dozen books of his own. Most of them are based on his reporting from foreign parts—the book of journalism he’s most proud of isSlaughterhouse: Bosnia and the Failure of the West(1995), about the war in the former Yugoslavia. He was just back in Sarajevo last week to participate in a conference on art and politics.
“It’s always interesting and disconcerting to go back in peace time,” he said. “And of course, the young, unsurprisingly and quite rightly, don’t want to hear about the war.” This time, he was struck by the way Bosnia has become part of a new and entirely different story of human struggle and suffering—as a staging post for migrants trying to enter the EU.
Is Another Dose of Peronism the Cure for Macri Economics?
The New York Review of Books, December 9, 2019, 1:07 pm
Buenos Aires—There is an old Argentine wisecrack that says: a person who leaves Argentina for six months, and then returns, finds the country completely transformed, but someone who returns after an absence of ten years finds that things are more or less as he or she left them. It is a joke but one whose accuracy would seem to be borne out by the results of the October 27 generalelectionthat repudiated the neoliberal government of Mauricio Macri and his Cambiemos(“Let’s Change”) party that had been in power since 2015, and instead madeAlberto Fernández president and former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchnerthe new vice-president. Thusrestored to power were the Peronists who have ruled Argentina for nearly twenty-three out of the thirty-six years since the restorationof democracy in 1983.
The outcome seemed to confirm, then, what remains the conventional wisdom for a large part of the Argentine population, Peronist and anti-Peronist alike: that Peronism is Argentina’s natural party of government. This conviction helps explain why Macri’s election in 2015 was seen as a political earthquake: here was a neoliberal, albeit one of the softer type, elected in profoundly corporatist Argentina. But the same belief also accounts why Macri’s repudiation by voters now seems a reversionto the political norm in Argentina andconsignsMacrito being the exception that proved the rule—since he has becomethe only sitting presidentin modern Argentine history to have stood for re-election and lost.
Such meta-political considerations aside, there were sound practical reasons for Argentine voters to return the Peronists to power. Macri had promisedmuch, from the curbing of inflation to a “business-friendly” modern economy and financial system freed from the shackles of the currency controls imposed by de Kirchner—usually known as Cristina. Argentine politicians increasingly go by their first names, in fact, but notMacri, which is testimony in itself.Macrihad also vowed to the rampant corruption that first Néstor Kirchner, who had preceded Cristina as president of Argentina (and died in 2010), and then Cristina herself and her cronies, had indulged in—to an extent outrageous even by Argentine standards. As the former Peronist politician turned political commentator and novelist, Jorge Asís, put it to me recently, compared to Cristina, Carlos Menem, a notoriously corrupt Peronist president of the 1990s, had been “little more than a pickpocket on the subway.”
Most daringly of all,Macriran in 2015on a platform to reducepovertyto zero. As president, he never repeated that promise, butMacrididencouragethe Argentine people to judge him on whether or not he had successfully reduced economic hardship. And they did.
In short, although there have doubtless been worse governments in Argentine history, not to mention the six times in the twentieth century the military has seized power,nonehas failed to live up to its promises quite so spectacularly and ineptlyas Macri’s. All politicians are narcissists, granted, but Mauricio Macriwas anincompetentnarcissist: headstrong, unwilling to take advice from all but a small circle of sycophants, and given to mistaking his wishes for reality. Corrupt as Cristina is,evenher enemies acknowledge that she’s highly intelligent, whereas even many of his supporters concede, at least off the record, thatMacriis not all that bright. More important, the distance between the radiant economic future Macri promised and the havoc his administration wrought is all but immeasurable. As Federico Sturzenegger, who headed the Argentine Central Bank during the first two-and-a-half years of Macri’s term,wrotein the immediate aftermath ofFernández’s election: “With a fall in per-capita income of close to 10 percent and cumulative inflation higher than 300 percent in his four years, it would be easy to declare his [Macri’s] presidency a failure—which, in terms of economic results, it was.”Alberto and Cristina could hardly have said it better themselves.
Vastly rich himself, besotted by fantasies about the wisdom of the global markets, Macri often came across as a left-Peronistcaricatureof a neoliberal—utterly out of touch with the way poor Argentines lived. So much so that the inhabitants ofBuenos Airesslums into which theMacrigovernment had poured money—notably Villa 31, a sprawling immigrant area in the shadow of an expressway—voted overwhelmingly for Alberto and Cristina last month. This dumbfounded the Macri people I spoke with after the August primary election: they had been expecting gratitude, but as polls showed, and as reporting inLa Nación, a conservative newspaper that had supported Macri, confirmed, his team were thinking like technocrats not politicians: people might accept the government’s largesse but since they perceived it as offered with disdain, they were, if anything, less favorably disposed to Macri than ever.
The disdain, in fact, flowed both ways. There was a snobbery towardMacri throughout his term, particularly from the political elite, that it’s important to distinguish from the resentment toward Macri so common among poor Argentines. In Argentina, this elite traditionally goes to high-powered public high schools and public universities, whereasMacri’s circle largely went to private Catholic schools and universities, institutions more noted for their rugby prowess than their academic rigor. Indeed, one of the dismissive terms for Macri and his close advisers was “Newman Boys,” after the prep school Macri attended. As José Natanson, the left-leaning editor of the Argentine edition ofLe Monde Diplomatique, who was then writing a book trying to explain Macri’s victory, told me in 2015: “For the most part, we quite simply don’t know many of these people. They come from a quite different world from ours.”
But if the political elite wasdismayed, the cultural and artistic elite, which, as in most countries, overwhelmingly breaks left, was appalled and outraged. Both in private and in the pages of the “Cristinista” daily,Página/12, there was much hysterical talk about Macri’s victory representing a return of the military dictatorship. This Buenos Aires-based intellectualcircle, always jealous in guarding its privileges, isinordinately full of itself—the only other country that comes close isFrance. This can bepicturesque. Argentina, after all, is a country where 800Lacanianpsychoanalysts can issuean open letterprotesting the overthrow of Evo Morales in Bolivia and violence against the anti-government demonstrators in Chile. During the presidential campaign, another such open letter supporting the Alberto–Cristina ticket attracted many, if not most, of thenation’s leading writers, artists, musicians, and theater and film people. In contrast,an open letterin support of Macrigarneredthe support of only a handful of culturalnotables, though it did slightly better witheconomists.
For all that lopsideness of signatories, a number of the best-known on the Alberto–Cristina side were not Peronists in any traditional sense, but had rather been won over by the Kirchners themselves. Thegospelof these Cristinistaswas not the writings of Juan Perón or even the cult of Evita, but rather the left-populist theories of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, combined with Bolivarianfantasiesof the sort thatFidel Castrooncesucceeded in schooling the Venezuelan leaderHugo Chávez.Their enthusiasm could become so extravagant that Horacio González, a distinguished sociologist and head of the National Library of Argentina during Cristina’s second term, could tell mein all sincerity that reports of theKirchners’corruptionwere wildly overstated. “Were they true,” he said, “onecould not breathe.” He paused and, after a histrionically deep breath, added, “but you see, I’m breathing!” In a less defensive vein, the Argentine political theorist Ricardo Forster, who, along with González and a few others, had founded in 2008 thepro-Kirchner“Carta Abierta” (Open Letter) group of intellectuals, told me that his support for Cristina was based partly on his conviction that she was “the most transgressive” of all political leaders in the Americas.
The recruitment of these intellectuals’moral supportwas carefully planned, in fact, by the Kirchners. According to Julio Bárbaro, an old-line Peronist who had been secretary of state for culture during Menem’s presidency, and served under theKirchnerson the agency regulatingcommunications, Néstor came into office in 2003 by something of a fluke, with only a small share of the popular vote. A governor from the deep south of the country with little recognition in Buenos Aires, he saw that he needed to legitimize himself. Undoing the impunity that the Argentine military had enjoyed since the end of the dictatorship in 1983 was an obvious way of gaining favor with leftist intellectuals, particularly anolder generationof writers and artists such as Luisa Valenzuela and Mempo Giardinelli, and leading human rights activists like Horacio Verbitskyand Hebe de Bonafini(of the “Mothers of Plaza de Mayo”group).
Another such move, in 2008, was a trust-busting initiative to break up the media empire of the Clarín Group (with which theKirchnershad been on good terms until then).Bárbaro’s viewis a jaundiced one: he believes the left intelligentsia was flattered by theKirchners’ attention and their willingness to appoint some among them to senior roles in the cultural apparatus of the Argentine state. Such outreach cost theKirchnerslittle, he says, but gave them the moral high ground, as well as support from circles outside of Peronist ranks, even as they robbed the country blind.
This helps explain why many Argentines accepted, for a surprisingly long time,Macri’s claims that their hardships were caused by the mess Cristina had made of the economy. There was some justification for this—or surprisingly little way of proving it either way. For during the last years of Cristina’s government, Axel Kicillof, the then-minister of the economy (now the governor-elect of the Buenos Aires province) ordered the national statistical bureau to stop publishing its research relevant to poverty. As a result, it is difficult to know by how severe the increase in poverty has been during theMacriyears, providing at least some room forMacri’s supporters to defend his record.
From the beginning of 2018, however, this position became unsustainable: as inflation and interest rates rose sharply and the value of the Argentine peso plummeted, poverty spiked—most of all in and around Buenos Aires. Leaders of left-wing social movements—notably, JuanGrabois, a charismatic young activist from a Peronist background widely seen in Argentina as having the ear of Pope Francis—report there is now a nutrition crisis, particularly for children, in poor areas of the city and the surrounding province.Graboisis often accused by his critics of being an alarmist, but statistics gathered by the Catholic Church, as well as testimony from the priests who run emergency food centers, largely bear him out.
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Voting patterns inArgentinepresidential elections have been fairly stable since Néstor became president: the Cristinistas cancount on about 35 percent of the vote, and Cambiemos on about 32 percent. So, as in so many democratic countries, the voters in the middle are the prize. Argentina’s singularity, though, is that many, maybe most, of these voters in the middleare Peronists, justnotKirchnerists. In other words, they are more narrowly Argentine nationalist and less Third Worldist—albeit that Cristina’s actions in government have rarely, if ever, matched her more militant rhetoric, what might be called “Maduro Lite” (some of her supporters are a different story).In electoral terms, this means that when Peronism is united, it is likely to win; when divided, likelylose.
In 2015,it was divided, with another senior Peronist leader, Sergio Massa, opposing the Cristina-anointed Daniel Scioli in the first round of elections. Under Argentina’s somewhat Byzantine electoral system, this entailed a run-off between the two candidates with the most votes: Macri and Scioli. Playing on Cristina’s widespread unpopularity, Macri won—but by avotemargin of less than three percentage points. From this can be inferred that, as Argentine political opinion now stands, a Peronist can win in the first round, but an anti-Peronist can’t. The challengefor Cambiemos, then, in 2019 was to secure enough votes in the first round to thwart an outrightPeronist victory, and then to hope to repeat its winning strategy of 2015.
A year before the election, Macri and his people were relatively sanguine about their chances. Cristina was thought to be as hated as ever by wide swaths of the population, so much so that old-line Peronists made no secret of their opposition to her running again and their quest to find someone who could stand in her stead. In the Macrista scenario, Cristina would stand and a center-right Peronist, Massa again or perhapsAlberto Fernández, who had been Néstor’s and then briefly Cristina’s chief of staff but, like Massa, became a fierce critic of her corruption, her economic policy, and her authoritarianism. For his part, Macri and his surrogates would turn to the one weapon remaining in their ideological arsenal: the fear many Argentines, particularly among the middle classes, felt when contemplating the prospect of Cristina’s returning to power.
So this was the Cambiemos plan: Macri would come in second in the first round, and then go on to defeat Cristina in the run-off. It all seemed to make sense, until, one day in May, it didn’t.
For Cristina was way ahead of them. For all her fiery rhetoric, Cristina has shown herself to be a canny politician. She saw just as clearly as the Macri people what Peronism’s challenge would be in the 2019 election, she first assented to a reconciliation with Alberto, which some commentators claim was brokered by Pope Francis (himself a devoted Peronist as a young man). Then came Cristina’smasterstroke: on May 18,she announcedvia a YouTube video and on social media that she had asked Alberto to run for president whileshewould run as his vice-president. Peronism was united in electoral alliance baptized, with some justice, asEl Frente de Todos (The Front of Everyone).
This left the Macristas’ strategy in shambles—made worse when Sergio Massa, having reportedly turned down feelers from Macri’s team to become Cambiemos’s vice-presidential candidate, rallied behind Alberto and Cristina. Meanwhile, there was nowhere to hide fromMacri’s catastrophic stewardship of the Argentine economy, after the Argentine presidentMacrihad been forced, in September 2018, to go cap in hand to the International Monetary Fund to secure a $57 billion loan,the largest in the IMF’s history. It was clear from the start that Argentina could not honor its repayment terms and economic conditionalities and that these would have to be renegotiated after the election, whoever won.
TheMacristassoldiered on, as though the iron law of electoral politics in any country not in the grip of a war, environmental disaster, or refugee emergency—“It’s the economy, stupid,” in James Carville’s phrase—somehow did not apply to Argentina. Never wavering in their defense of radical individualism, they would tell you thatArgentinesdid not want to go back to the corporatist past. Only when theresults of the primariesthat Argentina holds two-and-half months before the general election showed Alberto and Cristiana winning by 47 percent of the vote to Macri’s 32 percent—a margin of victory so crushing that there was no realistic chance of Macri making it to a runoff—did the Macristas realize the delusion of their “It’s Cristina, stupid” strategy. “They tricked themselves,”Grabois, the activist, suggested to me.
But if defeat in the presidential election did indeed prove to be inevitable, theMacristascould derive some comfort that their leader managed to claw back 2.2 million voters in the second leg, and that in the lower house of parliament, the Chamber of Deputies,Cambiemoswon only one seat fewer than the Peronists. This mattered because any constitutional change Alberto and Cristina might propose would require a two-thirds majority, soCambiemoshave an effective veto over any measure they deem too radical. A closer look at the vote, though, confirms that whenPeronismis united, itwins.
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In Alberto, the voters have elected a sort of Peronist everyman. In Spanish, there is a distinction between the words “persona” (person) and “personaje” (meaning apersonageorimportant figure). Cristina wasthe latter; so was Macri. But as one of Alberto’s friends put it in a documentary byLa Nación, “Alberto is a person, not a personage.”
Albertoalso reflects the protean nature of Peronism: it can be anything: right, left,corporatist, capitalist. Carlos Menem’s government in the 1990s represented rightistPeronism at its apogee. Néstor Kirchner veeredrightward during his presidency, while Cristina flirted with left-populist Bolivarian rhetoric but—unlike Maduro in Venezuela or Evo Morales in Bolivia—remained on excellent terms with most multinational interests, most controversially awarding the US oil giant Chevron, for example, a sweetheart deal over the development of the Vaca Muerta shale oil and gas fields in northern Patagonia. In this, Cristina often seemed to live up to another favorite Argentine joke in whichJuan Peron’s motorcade arrives at a red light and hischauffeur asks, “My general, what should I do when it turns green?” To which Peron replies, “Turn on the leftindicator—and make a right.”
For all her formidable qualities, though, Cristina is no Perón, and once Alberto is sworn in on December 10, it seems highly unlikely that she couldforcehim to do her bidding, let alone stand down in her favor—as some Macristas continue to predict will happen, even though it has done so only once in Argentine history (in 1973, when the left-Peronist politician Héctor José Cámpora was elected president but resigned in order to clear the field for Perón himself, newly returned from his Spanish exile, to run and win). This is not to say that Cristina will not be the most powerful vice-president in modern Argentine history, not least because of the influence—her enemies would say, the control—she exerts over the Peronist deputies and senators in Congress.
It is far from clear, though, that Cristina still wants to be president. She has an adult daughter who is extremely ill and being treated in Cuba. She is also under pressure from numerous pending court cases charging her with corruption, though it is improbable that she will be convicted let alone incarcerated. (In Argentina, indictments tend to rain down on the party that is out of power, not on the incumbent leaders. As the great investigative reporter forLa Nación, Hugo Alconada Mon, has documented in hisbookLa raíz de todos los males(The Root of All Evils), the Argentine political system is organized around “corruption and impunity,” and whatever else divides them, both the Peronists and their adversaries are enthusiastic backers of winners thanks to this system. Alberto is no exception to this, and shortly before the president-elect’s inauguration, Alconadapublished an articlelinking a close adviser of Alberto’s to one of the worst corruption scandals of Cristina’s second term.
Alberto will certainly need to revise the unfavorable terms of the deal Macri concluded with the IMF. But this may not be as difficult as some observers think given that, if Argentina is on the hook, so is the IMF. It is far from clear that the institution’s new director, Kristalina Georgieva, can afford the political and institutional ramifications of yet another Argentine default, which could be as catastrophic as the one that occurred at the end of 2001, not to mention the effect such a default would have on any future political ambitions she may have, most importantly, or at least so it is widely rumored, either at some point becoming head of the European Central Bank, the job her predecessor at the IMF, Christine Lagarde, has just assumed.
It is easy to wax apocalyptic about Argentina. Most, though not all, of its industries are uncompetitive; it is too dependent on exports of agricultural commodities—above all, soybeans; its labor unions are wildly corrupt and exert too great an influence; the public sector is bloated and phantom jobs are commonplace; education is underfunded and overstretched; and social mobility has ground to a halt. The country may indeed be a very “unfinished utopia,” as the political commentator Ignacio Zuleta once called it, but it’s hardly on the brink of collapse—as much as alarmism is a national neurosis in Argentina.
The country remains a highly desirable destination forimmigrants—not only from Andean countries and the disaster that is Venezuela, but also from East Asia and, in smaller but growing numbers,Africa.The higher education system may not be what it once was but Argentine universities continue to turn out extremely well-qualified and motivated young people. And the country’s cultural prowess, above all in literature but also in music and the plastic arts, remains a jewel. There are even some industries, nuclear energy being the most obvious, that can compete with the world’s best. Perhaps most important, Argentina is coming to seem an oasis of calm and stability in Latin America, compared to what is already happening in Chile, Bolivia, and Venezuela, and what may occur in Brazil with Lula’s release from prison galvanizing opposition to the Bolsonaro government.
Argentines themselves often complain bitterly about the country’s being riven in two ideologically. Yet that divide, which they call “la grieta,”the crack or the rift, does not seem worse than what one sees in the United States, the UK, or France, let alone Brazil. Rather unwisely, though, Alberto has promised as president to closela grieta.That scarcely seems likely; the fault line simply goes too deep. And according to some who know him, his flaws are uncomfortably close to Macri’s, most notably an inability to delegate.
Let’s assume Alberto successfully renegotiates the IMF loan. The four major trade union federations—which are Peronist, after all—as well the social movements led by people like Grabois will surely give Alberto some months’ grace, perhaps even a year. This will be very good news, but what will he do for them, and what will happen after?
Sooner or later, though, Alberto’s status as the anti-Macri will pall just as surely as being the anti-Cristina palled for Macri. The economist Simon Kuznetsonce jokedthat there were “four kinds of economies in the world: developed countries, underdeveloped countries, Japan, and Argentina.” He meant this in the most negative sense imaginable—and one might be mistaken for thinking that GuillermoNielsen,one of Alberto’s chief economic advisers, agreed with him when heinsistedduring the election campaign that “Argentina today is not a feasible economy.” But the emphasis was on “today,” and what Nielsen implied was simply the conventional wisdom of the Argentine political establishment that, Peronist and non-Peronist alike, prefers to blame that the country’s economic travails on opponents’ policies, rather than on any permanent structural problem.
But Kuznets had a point, and economic success in Argentina has been the exception, not the rule. Menem’s government in the 1990s, for example, stayed afloat on monies accrued from the privatization of state industries. The prosperity coinciding withNéstor Kirchner’s first government owed much to a vertiginous rise in the prices of agricultural commodities in world markets. No suchdeus ex machinais likely to smooth Alberto’s passage as president. Even if he defies the expectations of both his neoliberal critics and the radical social movement activists, and turns out to be a much better president than Macri, it is difficult to see him extracting either the economy or the polity from the morass in which Argentina finds itself.
Esta semana me enviaram uma mensagem trocada entre membros do Conselho Editorial ou associados à revista Geopolítica, com a qual colaborei uma única vez, dez anos atrás, não porque eu tivesse solicitado, mas porque seus responsáveis pretenderam reproduzir, já em segunda mão, um artigo meu, como se pode verificar por este registro completo deste meu texto de 2009:
A mensagem que recebi, indiretamente, dizia o seguinte: "Olá pessoal, o Docentes pela Liberdade (DPL) irá "adotar" uma revista da área de Humanas. Minha ideia é transformar esse periódico num veículo da divulgação da LIBERDADE, dentro de um viés acadêmico. É a revista de Geopolítica, editada pelo amigo Edu Albuquerque. Inicia-se hoje uma campanha nacional de levantamento de fundos para que o editor, prof Edu Silvestre, possa colocar a revista em todos os bancos de dados internacionais. Para isso é preciso grana. Aqui o site da revista: http://www.revistageopolitica.com.br/. Falei ontem com a Roxane Carvalho no telefone sobre divulgar essa revista para todos! Vamos tirar o escorpião do bolso!! Mandei 120,00 reais!" Bem, em sendo assim, vou retirar o meu nome Conselho Editorial (ver abaixo), uma vez que eu me sentiria extremamente desconfortável em colaborar com um empreendimento que esteja associado, de perto ou de longe, com esse grupo que se autointitula "Docentes pela Liberdade (DPL)", que nada mais é senão uma das correntes do olavismo mais sectário, mais alucinado que existe. Outros colegas acadêmicos que dele fazem parte talvez queiram verificar novamente a linha editorial da revista. Confesso que não sei o que significa "tirar o escorpião do bolso", mas não me parece coisa boa. Quanto ao nome citado, aparentemente está vinculado ao Olavo de Carvalho, o guru do governo atual, com o qual tenho muitas diferenças e nenhuma simpatia. Paulo Roberto de Almeida Brasília, 15/12/2019 REVISTA DE GEOPOLÍTICA LINHA EDITORIAL A equipe editorial e os colaboradores da Revista de Geopolítica procuram somar esforços na redução das assimetrias sociais, econômicas, tecnológicas e políticas do sistema internacional e, para tanto, acreditam na importância fundamental da discussão e divulgação dos temas geopolíticos sob uma perspectiva nacional e sul-americana. Serão avaliados artigos sobre desenvolvimento econômico nacional, segurança nacional e regional, estratégias de capacitação tecnológica, dentre outros, que visem discutir e propor políticas territoriais para o Estado brasileiro e fomentar uma agenda diplomática voltada à integração sul-americana. O posicionamento crítico frente a atual ordem internacional e a discussão/proposição de estratégias geopolíticas de superação formam o espírito desta publicação, mas de modo algum é permitida a apologia partidária ou a defesa de teses racistas ou xenófobas. Revista de Geopolítica Equipe Editorial Editor: Edu Silvestre de Albuquerque, UEPG, Brasil Editor-Assistente: Alides Baptista Chimin, Grupo de Estudos Territoriais Marcio Jose Ornat, Grupo de Estudos Territoriais Gislene Aparecida dos Santos, UFPR, Brasil Aldomar Arnaldo Rückert, UFRGS, Brasil Conselho Editorial Geraldo Lesbat Cavagnari Filho, UNICAMP, Brasil Paulo Fagundes Visentini, UFRGS, Brasil José William Vesentini, USP, Brasil Jose Flavio Sombra Saraiva, UnB, Brasil Catherine Prost, UFBA, Brasil Charles Pennaforte, CENEGRI/Faculdades Integradas Simonsen, Brasil Eli Alves Penha, UERJ, Brasil Nahuel Oddone, UNTREF, Argentina Cláudio Artur Mungói, Universidade Eduardo Mondlane, Moçambique Leonel Brizolla Monastirsky, UEPG, Brasil Shiguenoli Miyamoto, UNICAMP, Brasil Pedro Costa Guedes Vianna, UFPB, Brasil Leonardo Granato, UNTREF, Argentina Claudio Antonio Goncalves Egler, UFRJ, Brasil Paulo Cesar da Costa Gomes, UFRJ, Brasil Helio de Araujo Evangelista, UFF, Brasil Paulo Roberto de Almeida, Uniceub, Brasil Altiva Barbosa da Silva, UFRR, Brasil Editor responsável: Edu Silvestre de Albuquerque – UEPG Geógrafo e licenciado em Geografia (UFRGS, 1994/1995); Especialista em Integração Econômica e Mercosul (UFRGS, 1995); Mestre em Geografia Humana (USP, 1998); Doutor em Geografia (UFSC, 2007). Experiência nível superior: colaborador da Universidade de Passo Fundo (UPF) e Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS). Atualmente é professor adjunto da Universidade Estadual de Ponta Grossa (UEPG-PR). Organizador e co-autor da coletânea "Que País é esse?" (Editora Globo), de livros paradidáticos de ensino médio e fundamental (Editoras Saraiva e Atual) e de artigos científicos nas áreas de geografia, história e relações internacionais. Temáticas de pesquisa: geopolítica e relações internacionais.