Recent Posts

Strengthening Latin America’s presence in global health

In this editorial, published in the British Medical Journal, members of the BMJ’s Council for Latin America, Deisy Ventura (University of São Paulo) and Miguel O’Ryan (University of Chile), address Latin America’s essential contributions to global health and lay out priorities and challenges for improving health and equity in the region.

The Brazilian dictatorship in our pages

Sixty years ago, the military overthrew the democratically elected president, João Goulart. For the next 21 years, five generals succeeded each other in a regime that persecuted, arrested, and killed opponents and critics with the motto “Brazil: love it or leave it.”

Birth in Rio de Janeiro

Two articles published in HCS-Manguinhos explore birth, reproductive rights, and policies toward women in Rio de Janeiro. Their authors, Ilana Lowy (Cermes/Paris) and Cassia Roth (Universidade da Georgia) will be at Fiocruz on 16/05, participating in the event “Encontro às Quintas,” whose theme is “From interrupted justice to reproductive injustice: history, health emergencies and abortion in Brazil.”

Psychiatric diagnoses and female subjectivity

This article highlights the elements for diagnoses, such as schizophrenia, in the women’s ward of the Malaga Provincial Psychiatric Hospital during the first half of the 20th century in Spain.

Our women in science

On Women’s International Day, we highlight interviews we did with women researchers for our blog. The topics covered are as varied as their research areas.

Salvador de Toledo Piza Jr. and the Brazilian eugenics movement

It shows how Brazilian eugenicists reconfigured their practices after the Second World War and refused the idea that Brazilian eugenics would have been “soft” and dissociated from scientific racism.