In the late 1950s and early 1960s, standpoints changed in Brazilian foreign policy, as it became adapted to the transformation of the international situation. A public debate began in which two poles were formed: one of the them promoted the economical opening on the basis of pragmatic considerations for Central and Eastern European countries, and the other camp – especially the side committed with anticommunist and anti-Soviet ideals – rejected the Brazilian approach to the Soviet Union. In their argumentation, ...
Tópico(s): Brazilian History and Foreign Policy
2016 - Editora da Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul (EDIPUCRS) | Estudos Ibero-Americanos
... da expulsão, em função de sua participação na Revolução Húngara de 1956. Assim, Gyorgy Aczél, então secretário do Comitê Central ...
Tópico(s): Hungarian Social, Economic and Educational Studies
2021 - | Revista Novos Rumos