terça-feira, 23 de setembro de 2008

Um pouco de futebol - Armando Nogueira


Nosso tema não é futebol. Mas é impossível deixar de divulgar o belo trabalho de Armando Nogueira "Na Grande Área", relançado agora pela Editora Lance!.
Leiam abaixo uma simples "degustação". É puro deleite em ótimo português.

Tudo acontece na grande área: a guerra de Pelé, a guerrilha de Garrincha. O chute fatal, a rebatida heróica. O drible temerário de um beque, a tragédia do goleiro, em cujos pés solitários a grama não floresce.

Na grande área, ressoa, implacável a hora da verdade, erguendo e derrubando mitos no gesto simples de chutar uma bola. Na grande área, nasce o gol, nasce o infarto que mata de emoção o torcedor. Na grande área, onde os homens se acovardam e se engrandecem, a rasteira é pecado que no ato se paga pelo castigo do pênalti, entidade tão decisiva no destino e um jogo que segundo um velho pensador do futebol (n.d.l.r. Nenem Prancha), só devia ser cobrado pelo presidente do clube.

Nos canteiros da grande área, os pés imortais de Domingo da Guia, pisando a grama de leve para não magoar a própria semente da sua arte. Nilton Santos.

Quanta emoção na pureza geométrica da grande área, onde nem falta o singelo mistério de uma meia-lua, quarto minguante dos fracos, lua cheia de Leônidas. 

sexta-feira, 19 de setembro de 2008

Convocado VII Congresso Brasileiro de Direito Internacional


A Academia Brasileira de Direito Internacional convoca seu 7º Congresso para os dias 19 a 22 de agosto de 2009.
Agende-se!

quarta-feira, 10 de setembro de 2008

Dans la rue


"Le droit qu'on trouve dans la rue. comme cours de Faculté de droit, ce nes’t pas mal! Décidément, nous avons, en France, bien do chemin à faire... dans la rue, de préférence, nous qui, aprés tant d'annes d'études, connaissons mieux las couloirs du Palais que les dédales des quarties populaires..." Andre-Jean Arnaud

terça-feira, 9 de setembro de 2008

Revista Nosso Caminho - Niemeyer


Imperdível!!
Saiu o segundo número da nova revista editada pelo incansável e incrível Oscar Niemeyer.
Denominada "Nosso Caminho", ela aborda temas ligados à arte, cultura, política, ciência e arquitetura.
Atendem pela Internet, com envio pelos Correios. 

sábado, 6 de setembro de 2008

Marramao na UnB



O filósofo italiano Giácomo Marramao proferirá palestra sobre o 11/09, na mesma data, pela manhã no auditório da FDUnB.
Durante toda a semana os alunos da pós da UnB, PUC MG e UFSC participarão de um seminário com o autor de Passaggio a Occidente em encontros presenciais e video-conferências.

sexta-feira, 5 de setembro de 2008

Congresso do CONPEDI 2008



Indico a todos a inscrição e participação no XVII Congresso Nacional do CONPEDI - Brasília, 20-22/11/2008.
O prazo para submeter trabalhos já está aberto.
PRAZO PRORROGADO PARA 28/09.

Giacomo Marramao



Indico a leitura do texto "PASSADO E FUTURO DOS DIREITOS HUMANOS -
Da 'ordem pós-hobbesiana' ao cosmopolitismo da diferença", do filósofo italiano Giacomo Marramao. Trata-se de palestra proferida no último Congresso Nacional do CONPEDI (2007) e analisa a Declaração Universal dos Direitos Humanos de 1948 segundo premissas da escola de estudos pós-coloniais, com olhares gramscianos e habermasianos sobre os direitos humanos e a noção de modernidade-mundo.
Interessantíssima a interface entre o local e o global: "glocal", e o diálogo com Kant e Kelsen acerca de uma ordem jurídica internacional.

Disponível em http://conpedi.org/manaus/arquivos/ciacomo_marrama.doc

Reportagem Times Higher Education 1998


http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storyCode=108727&sectioncode=26


Youth seek free, equal access to education


21 August 1998


Rebecca Warden, Braga

Student leaders from around the world used the platform of this month's United Nations World Youth Forum to argue for free and equal access to higher education.


The forum brought 500 young people to Braga, northern Portugal, to discuss youth participation in world affairs. While other working groups debated issues such as human rights, development, health and employment, youth and student representatives from 30 countries concentrated on a blueprint for education for the 21st century.


The World Youth Forum was asked to make three recommendations for change to present to UN ministers responsible for youth in Lisbon shortly after the forum's end.


After intense debate, the three issues chosen were: free and equal access to education; the value of non-formal as well as formal learning for the full development of the individual; and the need for appropriate curricula, sensitive to local needs and reflecting a sense of global citizenship. The need to empower students to participate actively in decisions concerning education was a fourth concern.


Student leaders agreed that access and funding are key issues for higher education everywhere. "There is a funding crisis for education globally," said Ben Playle of the UN Youth Association of Australia. "In many people's eyes, virtually no country gives education adequate funds."


The limits to access vary from country to country. In Australia, students are protesting against new upfront tuition fees for some degree courses as well as increases in the deferred payment system.


In Nepal, the chances of a place at university are extremely low. Only about 1 per cent of the university-age population is able to study, said Keshav Pandey of the Asian Student's Association. He was dismayed that World Bank proposals for raising standards in Nepalese higher education involve reducing student numbers still further.


"Already our numbers are low, and they are asking for even that to be reduced, so access will get even harder," he said.


The recommendation on access, which will go to the UN's next general assembly, calls on governments to increase spending on education and urges Unesco and the international community to set up a global education fund to help poor students pay for housing, transport and materials to ensure "free and equal access".


Delegates argued that the content of education should be revised to include teaching on universal values such as peace, human rights, intercultural understanding and environmental protection and to promote global citizenship.


"We are not only educating ourselves to get a job, but also to experience democracy and to be a part of society," said Cecile /yen of the Norwegian Youth Council.


Many felt that curricula were out of date and out of touch with local needs, particularly in less developed countries. Aicha Coulibaly of Burkina Faso's Organisation of African Unity Club, said universities are not training the specialists her country needs. She was pleased, however, that local languages such as Moore, Dioula and Fulfulde have been put on the university curriculum alongside English and German.


A third concern centred on participation. The delegates believe young people are still under-represented when it comes to taking decisions on education even though they are supposed to be the main beneficiaries. Their recommendation, which did not make the final three but did get a special mention, calls on governments to support bodies that give students a voice and leadership training and youth exchange programmes.


"Conferences such as this are positive as they make young people realise they are protagonists, not just people who wait for the state to do things for them," said Roland Ranaivoarison, president of the International Movement of Catholic Students.


Although the student representatives could reach agreement on broad principles on education, it also became clear that their priorities are often very different. Wladimyr Camargos, in charge of international relations at Brazil's General Student Union, thought that students from wealthier countries tend to protest less on issues such as funding or access because their resources are greater. On the other hand, European students show more interest in issues such as mobility or international exchange programmes such as Erasmus.


"It is not that we are not interested - we are," he said. "But it just is not a priority. We are still fighting for the basics."


WORLD YOUTH FORUM RECOMMENDATIONS FOR EDUCATION IN THE 21ST CENTURY


Access - economic status should not determine access to higher education.


Non-formal education - governments should recognise the value of non-formal education for the full development of individuals.


Curricula - curricula must be relevant to employment opportunities but should also incorporate the teaching of languages, including local and indigenous languages, and universal values such as peace, human rights, intercultural understanding and environmental protection.


Participation - governments should empower youth and give them full participation in decision-making in education.