sábado, 20 de outubro de 2012

O Festival Latino-americano de Arte e Cultura (FLAAC). 2012



O Festival Latino-americano de Arte e Cultura (FLAAC). 2012

A Banda Olodum.

Uma banda de Samba Reggae.

Uma banda pan africanista

Uma banda afro latino americana.

Uma voz da luta pela igualdade.

Dia 27 das 18 as 20 h. no Flaac 2012 - Brasília.




sábado, 6 de outubro de 2012

O Brasil do presente e futuro - O Preto no Branco - Revista The Economist - SP


Bloco Olodum desfila na Barra


Salvador da Bahia - Lutar é preciso - (Caj Carlão) Bloco Olodum


LUTAR É PRECISO 
(CaJ Carlão)
O povo trazido do seio da África 
Fez o pelourinho virar paginas
Trouxeram o primeiro, o segundo e terceiro
E foram tantas cabeças 
Que eu não sei contar a a a...
Tingue, dingue, dingue ô
Tingue, dingue, dingue a
Tingue, dingue, dingue ô                            ( bis)
Espalharam os negros no mundo inteiro 
Pára, pára, para de mim enganar á,á,á
Para, para, para de nos enganar á,á,á
Pelourinho, pelô                                                 (bis)
Pelô, pelô, pelourinho
Pelourinho povo 
Sofrimento sempre
Crianças  descalças
 Morando nos becos ê
Tingue, dingue, dingue ê 
Tingue, dingue, dingue a
Pelourinho pelô                                                     (bis)
Pelo pelô Pelourinho
Sofrimento sempre
Vai olodum
E ensina esse povo a lutar
Com seu canto 
Forte olodum
Esses guetos precisam acabar
Mostre as armas 
Pois lutar é preciso
A mentira vai ter morrer
E o fim da fome, 
Que  destrói a esperança 
Qualquer dia vai ter de morrer 
Porque....
Tingue, dingue, dingue ê
Pelourinho pelô, pelô, pelô           
A, ê, ê, ô, ô,

quarta-feira, 3 de outubro de 2012

Ideas Economy: Brazil The next level of competition


  Ideas Economy: Brazil
The next level of competition
October 4th 2012, São Paulo
Synopsis

The Economist’s Ideas Economy: Brazil event will explore the most important issues affecting the social and economic future of Brazil, including the role of finance, innovation, entrepreneurship, human capital, infrastructure, design, culture, and policy.

In recent years, the economy of Brazil has grown to unprecedented heights and also experienced a great leveling. Throughout this transition, Brazil has emerged as the world's sixth largest economy, surpassing the United Kingdom in 2011. With two global sporting events—the Olympics and the World Cup—accelerating the transformation of Brazil into a rich-world country, Latin America’s premier democracy is now a highly competitive and resource-rich global economic force.

While the recent history of Brazil is a success story—one about rediscovering democratic traditions and lifting millions out of poverty—there are still significant obstacles to Brazil’s ability to create a sustainable model for economic growth. Creaking physical infrastructure combined with weak technological infrastructure, extreme commodity dependence, protectionist economic policies, corruption, environmental conflict, and a huge informal sector that limits productivity, are preventing Brazil from fully maximising its global competitiveness.

What concrete actions can the government and private sectors take to fuel innovation, productivity, and entrepreneurship? Can Brazil find the right formula for investing in education, technology, and infrastructure? And what is the right balance between supporting the legacy systems that led to Brazil's dramatic rise and developing the pillars of a new economy? Chaired by The Economist’s Americas editor, Michael Reid and São Paulo bureau chief, Helen Joyce, Ideas Economy: Brazil is an annual, live-event version of an Economist special report on Brazil. It is designed for a wide range of business leaders, entrepreneurs, decision-makers, public officials, global executives, and members of the ideas economy who are invested in the future of Brazil. 

Event chairs
Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist
Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist

Confirmed speakers
Kátia Abreu, senator of the republic; president, CAN
Rodrigo Baggio, founder, Center for Digital Inclusion
Rafinha Bastos, comedian
Eike Batista, chairman and chief executive, EBX Group
Claudia Costin, secretary of education for Rio de Janeiro
Luciano Coutinho, president, BNDES
Antonio Carlos Rego Gil, president, Brasscom
Maria das Graças Silva Foster, chief executive, Petrobras
Fernanda Feitosa, chief executive, SP-Arte
Rossana Fuentes Berain, Editorial vice-president, Grupo Editorial Expansión
Reinaldo Garcia, president and chief executive, GE Latin America
Marco Gomes, co-founder, Boo-Box
Marcello Hallake, partner, Jones Day
João Jorge Santos Rodrigues, president, Olodum
Danilo Miranda, director, SESC
Sergio Lazzarini, professor, INSPER
Ronaldo Lemos, director, Center for Technology and Society, Fundação Getúlio Vargas
Carlos Eduardo Lins da Silva, president, Projor
Marcelo Odebrecht, chief executive, Odebrecht
Fábio Rosa, founder and executive director, IDEAAS
Luis Paulo Rosenberg, vice-president, Corinthians
Álvaro Sierra, editor-in-chief, Semana 
Paulo Bernardo Silva, Minister of Communications for Brazil
Luiz Felipe Scolari, World-cup winning coach
Justine Thody, editorial director, Americas, The Economist Intelligence Unit
Marcos Troyjo, director, BRICLab, Columbia University
Andrew Vickers, Vice-president, NGO and Stakeholder Relations, Royal Dutch Shell
John H. Welch, executive director and emerging market macro-strategist, CIBC World Markets
Tom Zé, singer-songwriter



Programme

8.00 am
Registration and refreshments
Sponsored by BNY Mellon

9.15 am
Opening remarks
Michael Reid, Americas Editor, The Economist

9.25 am

The Brazil story
Rotating interviews exploring how Brazil is portrayed in the foreign press

Rossana Fuentes Berain, Editorial vice-president, Grupo Editorial Expansión
Carlos Eduardo Lins da Silva, president, Projor
Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist
Álvaro Sierra, editor-in-chief, Semana


10.20am
The road ahead
Investing in Brazil’s infrastructure

Luciano Coutinho, president, BNDES
Marcelo Odebrecht, chief executive, Odebrecht

Moderator : Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist

10.50 am
View from the top
New lessons in leadership

Maria das Graças Silva Foster, chief executive, Petrobras

Moderator: Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist

11.15 am
Morning break

11.45 am
To protect and serve?
A cross-industry examination of Brazil’s protectionist policies and the problems for global competitiveness 

Marcello Hallake, partner, Jones Day
Sergio Lazzarini, professor, INSPER
Ronaldo Lemos, director, Center for Technology and Society, Fundação Getúlio Vargas

Moderator: Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist 

12.30pm


Urban education
Reform from the bottom up and top down

Rodrigo Baggio, founder, Center for Digital Inclusion
Claudia Costin, secretary of education, Rio de Janeiro

Moderator: Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist

1.00 pm
Lunch
Sponsored by Brasscom
ICT in Brazil: Government and industry perspectives
Antonio Carlos Rego Gil, president, Brasscom 
Paulo Bernardo Silva, Minister of Communications for Brazil


2.25 pm
The search for growth: central banks in unchartered territory 
Research sponsored by BNY Mellon

Featuring a conversation with John H. Welch, executive director and emerging market macro-strategist, CIBC World Markets

Justine Thody, editorial director, Americas, The Economist Intelligence Unit



2.40 pm
Beyond Rio + 20
Interviews on energy and sustainable development in Brazil

Kátia Abreu, senator of the republic; president, CNA
Andrew Vickers, Vice-president, NGO and Stakeholder Relations, Royal Dutch Shell

Moderator: Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist

3.20pm
Brazil in 2050
Eike Batista, chairman and chief executive, EBX Group

Interviewer: Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist

3.40 pm
Frugal innovation
Will Latin America set the pace for global growth?

Reinaldo Garcia, president and chief executive, GE Latin America

Moderator: Justine Thody, editorial director, Americas, Economist Intelligence Unit

4.00pm
Innovation and job growth
Brazil now has a record number of entrepreneurs. But are new ideas enough to create new jobs? 

Marco Gomes, co-founder, Boo-Box
Marcos Troyjo, director, BRICLab, Columbia University

Moderator: Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist

4.25pm


Afternoon Break



4.50 pm




5.15 pm


5.30 pm




5.45 pm




6.10 pm



The art of soft power
Promoting Brazilian culture to a global audience

Introduction by:
Fernanda Feitosa, chief executive, SP-Arte
Danilo Miranda, director, SESC
Moderator:Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist

Cala a boca, Galvão
Brazil in 140 characters with Rafinha Bastos, comedian

Preto no branco
What Brazil can teach the world about race and identity with João Jorge Santos Rodrigues, president, Olodum
Interviewer: Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist

Nascido para jogar futebol?
The impact of the World Cup and Olympics on Brazil with Luis Paulo Rosenberg, vice-president, Corinthians and Luiz Felipe Scolari, World-cup winning coach
Moderator: Michael Reid, Americas editor, The Economist

Tropicália lixo lógico
Conversation and music by Tom Zé, singer-songwriter
Interviewer: Helen Joyce, São Paulo bureau chief, The Economist


6.30  pm
Cocktail reception 




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