1934: a
Constitution which should re-democratise the country after
the 1930 Revolution, the Charter of 34 is marked by the
rupture with the liberal traditions in terms of social
rights and the State's intervention in the economy.
1937: document
which marks the implantation of the Estado Novo's
authoritarian regime, under strong fascist inspiration. Its
dispositions contained, however, an extensive roll of social
and labour rights, within the corporatist conception.
1946:
Constitution that inaugurates the first effectively
democratic experience of Brazil's history, in establishing
the legal basis of the bill of rights, and in conferring
independence to the Legislative and Judiciary powers. It
did, however, maintain some of the Estado Novo's distinctive
traces, such as the corporatism.
1967: document
via which the military regime initiated in 1964 tried to
institutionalise itself. In it, is outstanding the
concentration of powers in the hands of the Executive, even
more aggravated by the Constitutional Amend n� 1, of 1969.
1988: this
Charter established the legal parameters of the democratic
regime initiated in 1985. It is innovative in its
definitions of human and collective rights. It is marked by
its extension and by the ridiculous character with which it
establishes the social rights and regulates the economic
order. It promotes a transfer of tributary revenues to the
federation states without precedents in the country's
history.
First
Republic
The Republic
was born of a Coup d'Etat, supported by a heterogeneous and
little cohesive alliance between positivist military
officers, land proprietors and radicalised sectors of the
urban intellectuality, which saw themselves badly
represented in the Empire's power structure.
The Republic
represented, with the establishment of Federalism by the
Charter of 1891, a substantial increase in the political
autonomy of the states' elites, a demand that existed since
the Empire, and especially since the Republican Party's
manifest, in 1870. The First Republic's political order was
consolidated during Campos Sales' Presidency (1898-1902), by
means of a pact between the states' elites and the national
Executive's leader, by which, in exchange for the
non-federal interference in the states' internal affairs,
their representations in the Congress should obey
presidential orientations. In the short and medium term, the
pact resulted in the formation of only one party in each
state, and in the stability of the national Executive
power's exercise.
The political
oligarchies of the states were connected to the interests of
the exporting agrarian system, especially to coffee, in S�o
Paulo, Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro, and to sugar, in the
Northeast. With the rapid development of S�o Paulo's
coffee-growing economy, oligarchies consolidated their power
a federal level. S�o Paulo's national hegemony in the
national ground ended by creating inter-oligarchic
conflicts, which became critical in the 20s and culminated
in the 1930 Revolution, ending the First Republic.
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