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“Deficient Education,” “Academic Questions,” and Student Movements: Universities and the Politics of the Everyday in Brazil's Military Dictatorship, 1969–1979

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 November 2018

Colin M. Snider*
Affiliation:
University of Texas-Tyler, Tyler, Texascsnider@uttyler.edu
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Extract

As the globally eventful year of 1968 drew to a close, Brazilian university students living in what was then a four-year-old dictatorship faced two new challenges that would profoundly alter student politics and resistance on campuses in the coming decade. The more infamous was Ato Institucional 5 (Institutional Act No. 5, or AI-5), which Brazil's military regime decreed on December 13, 1968 (a Friday). History and historiography have rightfully acknowledged AI-5 as ushering in the most repressive and authoritarian phase of Brazil's military dictatorship, with the regime closing the national congress and dramatically escalating state-sponsored violence and political silencing in ways that exponentially intensified earlier forms of repression and censorship.

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Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 2018