Brazil’s President Lula Faces A Damaged Economy & A Deeply Divided Country
One of the keys to the future Lula government is whether his coalition can stay together.
Anthony Pereira graduated from the University of Sussex in 1982 with a BA in Politics and then in 1986 obtained an MA in Government from Harvard University. His PhD dissertation at Harvard, defended in 1991, involved research on rural labour organisations in Northeast Brazil under two different periods, the late 1950s and early 1960s, and the late 1970s and 1980s. Rural labour organisations played an important role in the politics of both periods, and the dissertation drew on newspaper archives, qualitative interviews, government documents, and a survey of trade union leaders to analyse the changing nature and impact of that role. After completing his PhD, Pereira taught at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research in New York City. In 1995, he was a visiting professor at Harvard University, and in 1997-9, a visiting professor at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in Boston. In 1999 he moved to New Orleans, Louisiana, to take a position in the Department of Political Science at Tulane University. During this time he finished his second major research project, a comparative study of the Brazilian military regime’s legal treatment of opponents and dissidents. This study, drawing on court records and interviews, compared the Brazilian military regime (1964-85) to the military regimes in Argentina (1976-83) and Chile (1973-90). From 2010 to 2020 Pereira was the founding Director of the Brazil Institute at King's College London. From 2020 to 2022 he was a Professor in the Brazil Institute and the Department of International Development at King's. And in 2022 he joined Florida International University to become the Director of the Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean Center, as well as a Professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations. He remains a visiting professor at KCL. Pereira’s current work concerns citizenship, human rights, public security, and right-wing populism in Brazil from a comparative perspective. Pereira is a past President of the Brazilian Studies Association (BRASA) and is an occasional commentator on Brazil in the media. Pereira's latest books are Understanding Contemporary Brazil (Routledge 2018), co-authored with Jeff Garmany, and A Very Short Introduction to Modern Brazil (Oxford University Press 2020).
One of the keys to the future Lula government is whether his coalition can stay together.