Authors
Sandra Maria Cerqueira Da Silva, Silvia Pereira de Castro Casa Nova, David B Carter
Publication date
2016/1/1
Journal
Accounting in Conflict: Globalization, Gender, Race and Class
Pages
29
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing
Description
The social role of women in Brazil is subject to significant change in both capacity and scope. While women constitute the majority of the population in Brazil, they account for 40 per cent of the workforce, and thus, they remain comparatively invisible in public life. This is evident in political representation, as although Brazilian law stipulates that political parties must reserve at least 30 per cent of their nominations for women for legislative elections, this does not occur in reality. Furthermore, despite Afro-descendant Brazilians constituting the majority of the population, in the Chamber of Deputies, for instance, there are only 9 per cent Afro-descendant representatives. Therefore, this study focuses on understanding issues of political representation of Afro-descendant women in political spaces in Brazil–a country where politics is still predominantly white and male. Thus, despite a rhetorical position of an ‘open country …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SMC Da Silva, SPCC Nova, DB Carter - Accounting in Conflict: Globalization, Gender, Race …, 2016