Welcome to BlackandBrownNews.com! Your News, Information and Community Network Connecting You To The World.

Brazil will press ahead with plans to create quotas for blacks in universities and public sector jobs to redress longstanding inequalities despite opposition.

May 26, 2008 by editor  (View Source

(reuters) Brazil will press ahead with plans to create quotas for blacks in universities and public sector jobs to redress longstanding inequalities despite opposition, a government minister said on Tuesday. On the 120th anniversary of the abolition of slavery in Brazil, Minister for Racial Equality Edson Santos said the reforms were essential to tackle huge disadvantages blacks still face in the job market, education and society at large. "The abolition of slavery in Brazil was incomplete and blacks continue at the very bottom of the social pyramid," Santos told reporters. Brazil, which was one of the last major countries to abolish slavery, claims to have the world's second-largest black population after Nigeria. Nearly half of the around 185 million population considers itself black or dark-skinned. But to be black in Brazil is overwhelmingly to be poor. The homicide rate among blacks is 75 percent higher than among whites and 73 percent of young illiterates are black, according to a study on race the government published on Tuesday. Proposals in Congress due to be voted on this year would make quotas for blacks obligatory in public universities, government jobs and possibly private companies as well. The measures would also force government-sponsored advertisements to feature more blacks, who are noticeably absent from mainstream media publicity. But there has been an opinion backlash from some quarters. And the confederation of schools and universities has challenged the legality of quotas and government scholarships based on them before the Supreme Court, which is to rule in coming weeks. "Quotas won't solve poverty, they'll only create a racial problem where there was none," Bolivar Lamounier, a renowned Brazilian sociologist, told Reuters. Lamounier is one of 113 intellectuals, unionists, artists and businessmen who said in an open letter that quotas are unconstitutional and discriminatory against the poor of other races. Often held up as a model of racial harmony, Brazil has avoided violent clashes between blacks and whites in its recent history. Brazil also never had a strong black political movement of the kind that led to civil rights reform in the United States or the end of apartheid in South Africa.


Add a Comment

Join BBN for free to post a comment. If you already have an account, please login here to post a comment. You will be returned to this page after logging in.

20 Most Recent Stories